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2007-11-20


The Professional Handbook of Financial Risk Management (Hardcover)
by Lev Borodovsky (Editor), Marc Lore (Editor)


  • Hardcover: 832 pages
  • Publisher: Butterworth-Heinemann; 1st edition (April 15, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • Price:$430.00
  • Book Description
    The Professional's Handbook of Financial Risk Management is a major reference work in finance. A complete practical reference book covering all aspects of financial risk management including an in-depth look at operational risk management, regulation, risk-based capital, and risk adjusted performance measurement. The book focuses on practical financial risk management techniques and solutions, and is designed to guide the risk professional step-by-step through the implementation of a firm-wide risk management framework.




    This book covers the various roles of the risk management function. Rather than describing every possible role in exhaustive detail, the authors have provided a story line for each of the discussed topics, including practical issues that a risk manager needs to consider when tackling the subject, possible solutions to difficulties that might be encountered, background knowledge that is essential to know, and more intricate practices and techniques that are being used.

    By providing these fundamentals, the novice risk professional can gain a thorough understanding of the topic in question while the more experienced professional can use some of the more advanced concepts within the book. Thus the book can be used to broaden your own knowledge of the risk world, both by familiarizing yourself with areas in which you lack experience and by enhancing your knowledge in areas that you already have expertise.

    All authors are leaders in their field who between them have the expertise and knowledge, both practical and theoretical, to produce this definitive risk management guide.

    The editors of this book, Marc Lore and Lev Borodovsky, are senior financial risk managers at Sanwa Bank (International) London, and Credit Suisse First Boston, USA respectively. They also run The Global Association of Risk Professionals (GARP), the industry association for financial risk management practitioners and researchers.

    Endorsed by GARP - Global Association of Risk Professionals
    Authored and edited by leading financial markets risk professionals
    International in coverage; the concepts and methods covered are not specific to any country or institution, but rather to the risk management profession as a whole

    Book Info
    Provides a complete, practical reference book covering all aspects of financial risk management including an in-depth look at operational risk management, regulation, risk-based capital, and risk-adjusted performance measurment. Focuses on practical financial risk management techniques and solutions. DLC: Risk management.
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  • Contents
    FOREWORD xi
    PREFACE xiii
    ABOUT GARP xiv
    LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS xv
    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS xviii
    INTRODUCTION xix
    PART 1 FOUNDATION OF RISK MANAGEMENT
    1. DERIVATIVES BASICS Allan M. Malz 3

    Introduction 3
    Behavior of asset prices 4
    Forwards, futures and swaps 7
    Forward interest rates and swaps 14
    Option basics 16
    Option markets 21
    Option valuation 24
    Option risk management 29
    The volatility smile 34
    Over-the-counter option market conventions 37
    2. MEASURING VOLATILITY Kostas Giannopoulos 42
    Introduction 42
    Overview of historical volatility methods 42
    Assumptions 43
    Conditional volatility models 45
    ARCH models: a review 46
    Using GARCH to measure correlation 50
    Asymmetric ARCH models 52
    Identification and diagnostic tests for ARCH 53
    An application of ARCH models to risk management 55
    Conclusions 67
    3. THE YIELD CURVE P. K. Satish 75
    Introduction 75
    Bootstrapping swap curve 77
    Government Bond Curve 100
    Model review 106
    Summary 108
    vi The Professional’s Handbook of Financial Risk Management
    4. CHOOSING APPROPRIATE VaR MODEL PARAMETERS AND RISK
    MEASUREMENT METHODS Ian Hawkins 111

    Choosing appropriate VaR model parameters 112
    Applicability of VaR 114
    Uses of VaR 115
    Risk measurement methods 115
    Sources of market risk 117
    Portfolio response to market changes 124
    Market parameter estimation 128
    Choice of distribution 128
    Volatility and correlation estimation 130
    Beta estimation 133
    Yield curve estimation 134
    Risk-aggregation methods 134
    Covariance approach 138
    Historical simulation VaR 144
    Monte Carlo simulation VaR 145
    Current practice 146
    Specific risk 147
    Concentration risk 148
    Conclusion 148
    PART 2 MARKET RISK, CREDIT RISK AND OPERATIONAL RISK
    5. YIELD CURVE RISK FACTORS: DOMESTIC AND GLOBAL
    CONTEXTS Wesley Phoa 155

    Introduction: handling multiple risk factors 155
    Principal component analysis 158
    International bonds 168
    Practical implications 174
    6. IMPLEMENTATION OF A VALUE-AT-RISK SYSTEM Alvin Kuruc 185
    Introduction 185
    Overview of VaR methodologies 185
    Variance/covariance methodology for VaR 187
    Asset-flow mapping 191
    Mapping derivatives 194
    Gathering portfolio information from source systems 196
    Translation tables 199
    Design strategy summary 200
    Covariance data 200
    Heterogeneous unwinding periods and liquidity risk 201
    Change of base currency 201
    Information access 202
    Portfolio selection and reporting 203
    Contents vii
    7. ADDITIONAL RISKS IN FIXED-INCOME MARKETS Teri L. Geske 215
    Introduction 215
    Spread duration 216
    Prepayment uncertainty 223
    Summary 231
    8. STRESS TESTING Philip Best 233
    Does VaR measure risk? 233
    Extreme value theory – an introduction 237
    Scenario analysis 239
    Stressing VaR – covariance and Monte Carlo simulation methods 242
    The problem with scenario analysis 244
    Systematic testing 244
    Credit risk stress testing 247
    Determining risk appetite and stress test limits 251
    Conclusion 254
    9. BACKTESTING Mark Deans 261

    Introduction 261
    Comparing risk measurements and P&L 263
    Profit and loss calculation for backtesting 265
    Regulatory requirements 269
    Benefits of backtesting beyond regulatory compliance 271
    Systems requirements 282
    Review of backtesting results in annual reports 285
    Conclusion 286
    10. CREDIT RISK MANAGEMENT MODELS Richard K. Skora 290
    Introduction 290
    Motivation 290
    Functionality of a good credit risk management model 291
    Review of Markowitz’s portfolio selection theory 293
    Adapting portfolio selection theory to credit risk management 294
    A framework for credit risk management models 295
    Value-at-Risk 296
    Credit risk pricing model 299
    Market risk pricing model 301
    Exposure model 301
    Risk calculation engine 302
    Capital and regulation 302
    Conclusion 304
    11. RISK MANAGEMENT OF CREDIT DERIVATIVES Kurt S. Wilhelm 307
    Introduction 307
    Size of the credit derivatives market and impediments to growth 308
    What are credit derivatives? 312
    Risks of credit derivatives 318
    Regulatory capital issues 330
    viii The Professional’s Handbook of Financial Risk Management
    A portfolio approach to credit risk management 333
    Overreliance on statistical models 338
    Future of credit risk management 339
    12. OPERATIONAL RISK Michel Crouhy, Dan Galai and Bob Mark 342
    Introduction 342
    Typology of operational risks 344
    Who manages operational risk? 346
    The key to implementing bank-wide operational risk management 348
    A four-step measurement process for operational risk 351
    Capital attribution for operational risks 360
    Self-assessment versus risk management assessment 363
    Integrated operational risk 364
    Conclusions 365
    13. OPERATIONAL RISK Duncan Wilson 377
    Introduction 377
    Why invest in operational risk management? 377
    Defining operational risk 378
    Measuring operational risk 386
    Technology risk 396
    Best practice 399
    Regulatory guidance 403
    Operational risk systems/solutions 404
    Conclusion 412
    PART 3 ADDITIONAL RISK TYPES
    14. COPING WITH MODEL RISK Franc¸ois-Serge Lhabitant 415
    Introduction 415
    Model risk: towards a definition 416
    How do we create model risk? 417
    Consequences of model risk 426
    Model risk management 431
    Conclusions 436
    15. LIQUIDITY RISK Robert E. Fiedler 441
    Notation 441
    First approach 442
    Re-approaching the problem 449
    Probabilistic measurement of liquidity – Concepts 451
    Probabilistic measurement of liquidity – Methods 455
    Dynamic modeling of liquidity 464
    Liquidity portfolios 468
    Term structure of liquidity 469
    Transfer pricing of liquidity 471
    Contents ix
    16. ACCOUNTING RISK Richard Sage 473
    Definition 473
    Accounting for market-makers 474
    Accounting for end-users 486
    Conclusion 490
    17. EXTERNAL REPORTING: COMPLIANCE AND DOCUMENTATION RISK
    Thomas Donahoe 491

    Introduction 491
    Defining compliance risk 492
    Structuring a compliance unit 493
    Creating enforceable policies 499
    Implementing compliance policies 508
    Reporting and documentation controls 513
    Summary 520
    18. ENERGY RISK MANAGEMENT Grant Thain 524
    Introduction 524
    Background 524
    Development of alternative approaches to risk in the energy markets 525
    The energy forward curve 526
    Estimating market risk 536
    Volatility models and model risk 542
    Correlations 543
    Energy options – financial and ‘real’ options 543
    Model risk 545
    Value-at-Risk for energy 546
    Stress testing 547
    Pricing issues 548
    Credit risk – why 3000% plus volatility matters 548
    Operational risk 551
    Summary 555
    19. IMPLEMENTATION OF PRICE TESTING Andrew Fishman 557
    Overview 557

    Objectives and defining the control framework 559
    Implementing the strategy 563
    Managing the price testing process 573
    Reporting 574
    Conclusion 578
    PART 4 CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, TECHNOLOGY AND REGULATION
    20. IMPLEMENTING A FIRM-WIDE RISK MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK
    Shyam Venkat 581

    Introduction 581
    Understanding the risk management landscape 583
    Establishing the scope for firm-wide risk management 585
    Defining a firm-wide risk management framework 587
    Conclusion 612
    x The Professional’s Handbook of Financial Risk Management
    21. SELECTING AND IMPLEMENTING ENTERPRISE RISK MANAGEMENT
    TECHNOLOGIES Deborah L. Williams 614

    Introduction: enterprise risk management, a system implementation
    like no other 614
    The challenges 615
    The solution components 618
    Enterprise risk technology market segments 623
    Different sources for different pieces: whom to ask for what? 627
    The selection process 629
    Key issues in launching a successful implementation 631
    Conclusions 633
    22. ESTABLISHING A CAPITAL-BASED LIMIT STRUCTURE
    Michael Hanrahan 635

    Introduction 635
    Purpose of limits 635
    Economic capital 637
    Types of limit 644
    Monitoring of capital-based limits 654
    Summary 655
    23. A FRAMEWORK FOR ATTRIBUTING ECONOMIC CAPITAL AND
    ENHANCING SHAREHOLDER VALUE Michael Haubenstock and
    Frank Morisano 657

    Introduction 657
    Capital-at-risk or economic capital 658
    A methodology for computing economic capital 659
    Applications of an economic capital framework 675
    Applying economic capital methodologies to improve shareholder
    value 680
    Conclusion 687
    24. INTERNATIONAL REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS FOR RISK
    MANAGEMENT (1988–1998) Mattia L. Rattaggi 690
    Introduction 690
    Quantitative capital adequacy rules for banks 691
    Risk management organization of financial intermediaries and
    disclosure recommendations 716
    Cross-border and conglomerates supervision 723
    Conclusion 726
    25. RISK TRANSPARENCY Alan Laubsch 740
    Introduction 740
    Risk reporting 740
    External risk disclosures 764
    INDEX 777
  • [此贴子已经被作者于2007-11-20 10:21:22编辑过]

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