Objective 3 Flashcards
What is the difference in credit exposure in bonds and derivatives?
(VaR18)
- Bonds
- Credit exposure = principal
- Can vary before expiration if the market value of the bond fluctuates
- Derivatives
- Credit exposure = netted payments (++ complex!)
- Represents the positive value of the contract, which is much less than the notional account
Relate the following against the four axioms of coherent risk measures:
- Maximum
- VaR
- CTE
- E(Loss)
- StdDev(Loss)
- E(Loss) + 2*StdDev(Loss)
What are the three risk factors in credit risk?
(VaR18)
- Default risk
- Risk of default by the counterparty
- Measured by the probability of default (PD)
- Credit exposure
- Risk of fluctuations in the market value of the claim on the counterparty
- At default, this is known as exposure at default (EAD)
- Recovery
- Uncertainty in the fraction of the claim recovered after default
- Recovery = 1 - loss given default (LGD)
What are netting arrangements?
(VaR18)
- Important method to control credit risk exposures
- Allows the offsetting of oblications under the same agreement, resulting in one single net claim against the counterparty
What are complementary tools for VaR?
(ERM102)
- Alternatives to VaR
- Stress testing
- Strongly encouraged by regulators
- Stressed VaR
- Larger capital requirements than VaR
- Sound judgment
What are VaR’s shortcomings?
(ERM102)
- VaR is not coherent (fails subadditivity property)
- VaR does not consider tail risk (risk blindness)
- The real distribution of returns is not normally distributed
- Different companies use different methodologies to calculate VaR
- e.g., Parametric (VarCovar), Historical simulation, Monte Carlo
- Historical data and observation period
- VaR reflect more historical than the present
- Agency problems
- Used to evaluate agents, traders, managers
- Regulatory disclosure
What is ECE?
(VaR18)
Expected Credit Exposure
= expected value of asset replacement value (if positive) on a target date
What should the actuary perform in a data review?
(OR - ASOP23)
- Data definitions
- Make a reasonable effort to determine the definition of each data element
- Identify questionable data values
- Identify data values that are materially questionable
- Consider further steps if questionable data could have a material impact
- Review of prior data
- If similar review ahs been donde before, review current data for consistency with data previously used
What is ECL?
(VaR18)
Expected Credit Loss
ECLt = ECEt x (1-f) x kt
where
- kt = (1-ct-1) dt *= default
- f* = recovery rate
How is the probability of default (PD) assessed?
(VaR18)
- Actuarial models
- Similar to survivorship models where cn is a cumulative default rate
- ki = (1-ci-1)di
- Market-based model
- Reduced form model
- P* = 100 / (1 + y*)T ~ y + π(1-f)
- where probability of default is π
- Structural Model
- See Merton model (~ Black-Scholes)
- Reduced form model
What are alternatives to VaR?
(ERM102)
- Expected shortfall (TVaR, CTE) - coherent
- Conditional VaR (CVaR) - coherent, weighted average of VaR and ES
- Modified VaR (mVaR) - considers skewness and kurtosis
- CoVaR - conditional
What should be documented by the actuary in terms of the data?
(OR - ASOP23)
- The process the actuary followed to evaluate the data
- A description of any material defects the actuary believes are in the data
- A description of any adjustments or modifications made to the data, other than routine correction made by reference to such documents
- Any other documentation necessary to comply with the disclosure requirements
What are the limitations of an actuary’s responsibility with respect to data?
(OR - ASOP23)
- The actuary is not required to determine whether the data or other information provided has been falsified or intentionally misleading
- The actuary is not required to develop additional data compilations solely for the purpose of searching for questioanble or inconsistent data
- The actuary is not required to audit the data
According to ASOP23, what are some considerations in the selection of data?
(OR - ASOP23)
- Appropriateness for the intended purpose of the analysis
- Reasonableness and comprehensiveness of the necessary data elements
- Any known, material limitations of the data
- The cost and feasibility of obtaining alternative data
- The benefit to be gained from an alternative data set or data source as balanced against its availability and the time and cost to collect and compile it
- Sampling methods, if used to collect the data
What is PVECL?
(VaR18)
Present value of expected credit loss
PVECL = Sum over t ( ECLt x PVt)
~ [(1/T) Σ ECEt] (1-f) [Σkt] [(1/T) Σ PVt ]
= Avg exposure x LDG x Avg PD x Avg PV