1 / 62

Presentation by S P Dhal, Faculty Member, SPBT College

Risk Management in Banks. [Module B]. Live Interactive Learning Session [16-04-2007]. Presentation by S P Dhal, Faculty Member, SPBT College. What is Risk?. Risk is the probability that the realized return would be different from the anticipated/expected return on investment .

kyrie
Download Presentation

Presentation by S P Dhal, Faculty Member, SPBT College

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Risk Management in Banks [Module B] Live Interactive Learning Session [16-04-2007] Presentation by S P Dhal, Faculty Member, SPBT College

  2. What is Risk? • Risk is the probability that the realized return would be different from the anticipated/expected return on investment. • Risk is a measure of likelihood of a bad financial outcome. • All other things being equal risk will be avoided. • All other things are however not equal and that a reduction in risk is accompanied by a reduction in expected return.

  3. What is Risk? The uncertainties associated with risk elements impact the net cash flow of any business or investment. Under the impact of uncertainties, variations in net cash flow take place. This could be favourable or un-favourable. The un-favaourable impact is ‘RISK’ of the business.

  4. Anatomy of Bank Risk Financial Risk Non-Financial Risk Business Risk Strategic Risk Delivery (of Financial Services) Risk Balance Sheet Risk Operational Risk Legal Risk Reputational Risk

  5. Balance Sheet Risk Credit Risk Market Risk Concentration Risk Intrinsic Risk Commodity Risk Interest Rate Risk Liquidity Risk Currency Risk

  6. Interest Rate Risk Price Risk Reinvestment Risk Yield Curve Risk Basis Risk Gap Risk

  7. Risk in Traditional Sense • Systematic Risks • Affects all Industry/ All securities • Non-controllable • Non-diversifiable • Unsystematic Risks • Affects specific Industry/ Specific Securities • Controllable • Diversifiable

  8. Risk in Banking Business Banking business is broadly grouped under following major heads from Risk Management point of view: • The Banking Book • The Trading Book • Off-Balance-sheet Exposures

  9. The Banking Book All assets & liabilities in ‘banking book’ have following characteristics: 1. They are normally held until maturity 2. Accrual system of accounting is applied Since assets & liabilities are held till maturity, their mismatch may land the bank in either excess cash in-flow or shortage of cash on a particular time. This commonly known as ‘Liquidity Risk’.

  10. The Banking Book Due to change in interest rates, assets and liabilities are subjected to interest rate risk on their maturities/re-pricing. Further, the assets side of the banking book generates credit risk arising from defaults in payment of interest and or installments by the borrowers. In addition to all these risk, banking book also suffers from ‘Operational Risk’.

  11. The Trading Book The trading book includes all the assets that are held with intention of trading that are marketable. They are normally held for a short duration and positions are liquidated in the market. Trading Book assets include investment held under ‘Held for Trading’ category. They are subjected to Market Risk and are marked to market.

  12. Off-Balance-Sheet Exposure • Off-balance sheet exposure is contingent in nature- Guarantees, LCs, Committed or back up credit lines etc. • A contingent exposure may become a fund-based exposure in Banking book or Trading book. It is known as Call Risk • Therefore, Off-balance sheet exposures may have liquidity risk, interest rate risk, market risk, credit or default risk and operational risk

  13. RISKS IN BANKING • Risk is inherent in Banking • Banking is not avoiding risks but managing it • Risks in banking can be of Broadly 3 types: • Credit Risk • Market Risk • Operational Risk • ALM addresses to Market Risks

  14. Risk Management in Banks & Basel Accord –I, 1988 In 1988, Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, published a framework for a minimal capital requirement for credit exposure. The bank books were classified into 5 buckets i.e. grouped under 5 categories according to credit risk weights of zero, ten, twenty, fifty and one hundred percent. Assets required to be classified into one of these risk buckets based on the parameter of counter party. Banks required to hold capital equal to 8% of the risk-weighted value of assets. In India, the minimum capital requirement is 9% as decided by RBI.

  15. 1996 Amendment to include Market Risk In 1996, BCBS published an amendment to provide an explicit capital cushion for ‘Market Risk’ to which banks are exposed. Market Risk is the risk of adverse deviations of the marked-to-market value of the assets due to market movements as a result of change in interest rates, market price or exchange rate.

  16. Basel II Accord- Need & Goals Linking of risks with capital in terms of Basel Accord I needed a revision for the following reasons: - Credit assessment under Basel I is not risk sensitive enough. ‘One Suit fit all’ approach was applied to all types of entities with uniform 100% risk weightage. - Risk arising out of operation were ignored though it has potential of affecting the bank’s survival.

  17. Basel Accord II The Basel II Accord is based on three pillars: • Minimum Capital Requirement • Supervisory review process & • Market discipline

  18. The New Basel Capital Accord Three Basic Pillars Market Discipline Requirements Minimum Capital Requirement Supervisory Review Process

  19. Minimum Capital RequirementPillar One Standardized Internal Ratings Credit Risk Models Credit Mitigation Credit Risk Trading Book Banking Book Risks Market Risk Operational Other Other Risks

  20. Minimum Capital Requirements- Credit Risk (Pillar One) • Standardized approach (External Ratings) • Internal ratings-based approach • Foundation approach • Advanced approach • Credit risk modeling (Sophisticated banks in the future) Minimum Capital Requirement

  21. Evolutionary Structure of the Accord Credit Risk Modeling ? Advanced IRB Approach Foundation IRB Approach Standardized Approach Increased level of sophistication

  22. The New Basel Capital Accord • Standardized Approach • Provides Greater Risk Differentiation than 1988 • Risk Weights based on external ratings • Five categories [0%, 20%, 50%, 100%, 150%] • The loans considered past due be risk weighted at 150 percent unless a threshold amount of specific provision has already been set aside by the bank against the loan • Special treatment for ‘Retail’ & ‘SME’ sectors

  23. Standardized Approach:New Risk Weights (January 2001) Assessment Claim AAA to A+ to A- BBB+ to BB+ to Below BB- (B-) Un-rated AA- BBB- BB-(B-) Sovereigns 0% 20% 50% 100% 150% 100% Option 11 20% 50% 100% 100% 150% 100% Banks 3 3 3 3 50% Option 22 20% 50% 100% 150% 50% 50% (100%) Corporates 20% 100% 100% 150% 100% 1 Risk weighting based on risk weighting of sovereign in which the bank is incorporated. 2 Risk weighting based on the assessment of the individual bank. . 3Claims on banks of a short original maturity, for example less than six months, would receive a weighting that is one category more favourable than the usual risk weight on the bank’s claims

  24. The New Basel Capital Accord Capital for Credit Risk- Internal Rating Based Approach: • Three elements: • Risk Components [PD, LGD, EAD] • Risk Weight conversion function • Minimum requirements for the management of policy • and processes • Emphasis on full compliance • EL (Expected Loss) = PDxLGDxEAD • Definitions; • PD = Probability of default • LGD = Loss given default • EAD = Exposure at default • Note: BIS is Proposing 75% for unused commitments • EL = Expected Loss

  25. Standardized Approach verses IRB Approach Internal rating system & Credit VaR New standardized model 16 12 PER CENT 8 1.6 0 B A- S & P : A+ AA BB- AAA BB+ BBB CCC 5.5 7 2 3 4.5 5 6 6.5 1 4 RATING

  26. The New Basel Capital Accord Market Risk: (a) Standardised Method (i) Maturity Method (ii) Duration Method (b) Internal Models Method

  27. What is Operational Risk? • Earlier stood for non-financial risks • Current Basel II definition is “the risk of loss resulting from inadequate or failed internalprocesses, people and systems or from external events”

  28. Basel II definition Cont… • Includes both internal and external event risk • Legal risk is also included, but reputational risk not included • Direct losses are included, but indirect losses (opportunity costs) are not

  29. Examples of OR Loss Events * Based on Basel Committee’s OR loss event classification

  30. The New Basel Capital Accord Capital Charge for Operational Risk- As in credit, three alternate approaches are prescribed: - Basic Indicator Approach - Standardised Approach - Advanced Measurement Approach

  31. 1). Basic Indicator Approach (Capital Charge for Operational Risk) To begin with, RBI has advised bank to follow Basic Indicator Approach in India which is 15% of the average Gross Income over three year.

  32. KBIA = [ ∑ (GI*) ] / n, • Where • KBIA= the capital charge under the Basic Indicator Approach. • GI = annual gross income, where positive, over the previous three years • = 15% set by the Committee, relating the industry-wide level of required capital to the industry-wide level of the indicator. • n = number of the previous three years for which gross income is positive • Gross income = Net profit (+) Provisions & Contingencies (+) operatingexpenses (Schedule 16) (-) profit on sale of HTM investments (-) income from insurance (-) extraordinary / irregular item of income (+) loss on sale of HTM investments.

  33. 2). Standardized Approach (the betas)Capital = b*gross income, by business line • Standardized / Alternative Standardized • Bank’s activities divided (‘mapped’) into 8 business lines • Capital charge is sum of specified % (‘beta’) of each business line’s average annual gross income over previous 3 years* • Beta varies by business line (12%-18% range) • General criteria required to qualify for its use • Active involvement of Board and senior management in OR management framework • Existence of OR management function, reporting and systems • Systematic tracking of OR data (including losses) by business line • OR processes and systems subject to validation and regular independent review by internal and external parties

  34. Advantages/ Disadvantages Strength: • Simplicity Limitations: • Blunt charge, not risk-sensitive: • One size fits all • Risk does not increase linearly with gross income • Fails to capture effect of bank’s management of operational risk • No incorporation of qualitative factors • No incentive for banks to invest in op risk infrastructure

  35. 3) Advanced Measurement Approach (AMA) (Capital Charge for Operational Risk) • Capital = firm specific calculation, statistically based methodology • Intended to overcome the lack of risk sensitivity in the simpler approaches by setting regulatory capital based on the bank’s internal risk measurement models • These models use the bank’s own metrics to measure operational risk, internal loss data, external loss experience, scenario analysis, and risk mitigation techniques to set capital commensurate with the operational risk posed by the bank’s activities

  36. ADVANTAGE

  37. COMPARING OPERATIONALRISK WITH MARKET RISK AND CREDIT RISK

  38. New Basel Accord II: supervisory review process- • Defines the role of supervisors with regard to capital adequacy Pillar II

  39. New Basel Accord II: Market Discipline • Disclosure requirements that allow market participants to assess key information about a bank’s risk profile and level of capitalisation. Pillar-III

  40. Value at Risk VaR is defined as the predicted worst-case loss at a specific confidence level over a certain period of time assuming normal trading conditions. That means, we can incur loss a maximum of Rs. X (the VaR) over the next one week (time period) and, may expect with 99% confidence level (i,.e. it would be so 99 times out of 100).

  41. Value at Risk There are three main approaches to calculating VaR: • The Correlation Method, also known as Variance/Covariance Matrix Method • Historical Simulation Method • Monte Carlo Simulation

  42. Comparison of various VaR Modules

  43. Advantages of VaR • It captures an important aspect of risk in a single number • It is easy to understand • It asks the simple question: “How bad can things get?”

  44. Back Testing • Is a process where model based VaR is compared with the actual performance of the portfolio. This is carried out for evaluating a new model or to assess the accuracy of the existing model

  45. Stress Testing Stress Testing essentially seeks to determine possible changes in the market value of a portfolio that could arise due to non-normal movement in one or more market parameters. Stress Testing covers many different techniques. Some of important ones are: • Simple Sensitivity Test • Scenario Analysis • Maximum Loss • Extreme Value Theory

  46. Risk Monitoring & Control • Risk Monitoring and Control calls for implementation of risk and business policies simultaneously. This is achieved through the following: • Policy guidelines limiting roles and authority • Limits structure and approval process • System and procedures to unbundle products and transactions to capture all risks • Guidelines on portfolio size and mix • Defined policy for market to market • Limit monitoring and reporting • Performance Measurement and Resource allocation

  47. Few Practice Questions

  48. Q. A Bank reports a one-week VaR of $1M at the 95% confidence level. Which of the following statements is most likely to be true? (a) The daily return on the company portfolio follows a normal distribution so that a one-week VaR could be computed. (b) The one week VaR at the 99% confidence level is $5M. (c) With probability 95%, the company will not experience a loss greater than $95M in one week. (d) With probability 5%, the company will loose $1M or more in one week. Answer: (d)

  49. Q. Reserve Bank of India has advised Banks to build up an Investment Fluctuation Reserve (IFR) of a minimum 5 per cent of their investments in the categories “Held for Trading” (HFT) and “Available for Sale” (AFS). The specification is to take care of following Risk. (a). Interest Rate Risk (b). Operational Risk (c). Credit Risk (d). None of above Answer: (a)

More Related