1 / 21

Overview

Overview. This chapter discusses the risks associated with financial intermediation: Interest rate risk, market risk, credit risk, off-balance-sheet risk, foreign exchange risk, country or sovereign risk, technology risk, operational risk, liquidity risk, insolvency risk

otis
Download Presentation

Overview

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. Overview • This chapter discusses the risks associated with financial intermediation: • Interest rate risk, market risk, credit risk, off-balance-sheet risk, foreign exchange risk, country or sovereign risk, technology risk, operational risk, liquidity risk, insolvency risk • Note that these risks are not unique to FIs • Faced by all global firms

  2. Risks of Financial Intermediation • Interest rate risk resulting from intermediation: • Mismatch in maturities of assets and liabilities. • Interest rate sensitivity difference exposes equity to changes in interest rates • Balance sheet hedge via matching maturities of assets and liabilities is problematic for FIs. • Inconsistent with asset transformation role • Refinancing risk. • Reinvestment risk.

  3. Market Risk • Incurred in trading of assets and liabilities (and derivatives). • Example: Barings Bank’s Nick Leeson & decline in Nikkei Stock Market Index. • Heavier focus on trading income over traditional activities increases market exposure. • Trading activities introduce other perils as was discovered by Allied Irish Bank’s U.S. subsidiary, AllFirst Bank when a rogue trader successfully masked large trading losses and fraudulent activities involving foreign exchange positions

  4. Market Risk • Distinction between Investment Book and Trading Book of a commercial bank • Heightened focus on Value at Risk (VAR) • Heightened focus on short term risk measures such as Daily Earnings at Risk (DEAR) • Role of securitization in changing liquidity of bank assets and liabilities

  5. Credit Risk • Risk that promised cash flows are not paid in full. • Firm specific credit risk • Systematic credit risk • High rate of charge-offs of credit card debt in the 1980s, most of the 1990s and early 2000s • Credit card loans (and unused balances) continue to grow

  6. Charge Off Rates for Commercial Banks

  7. Implications of Growing Credit Risk • Importance of credit screening • Importance of monitoring credit extended • Role for dynamic adjustment of credit risk premia • Diversification of credit risk

  8. Off-Balance-Sheet Risk • Striking growth of off-balance-sheet activities • Letters of credit • Loan commitments • Derivative positions • Speculative activities using off-balance-sheet items create considerable risk

  9. Foreign Exchange Risk • FI may be net long or net short in various currencies • Returns on foreign and domestic investment are not perfectly correlated. • FX rates may not be correlated. • Example: $/€ may be increasing while $/¥ decreasing • and relationship between ¥ and € time varying. • Undiversified foreign expansion creates FX risk.

  10. Foreign Exchange Risk • Note that completely hedging foreign exposure by matching foreign assets and liabilities requires matching the maturities as well*. • Otherwise, exposure to foreign interest rate risk remains. *More correctly, FI must match durations, rather than maturities. See Chapter 9.

  11. Country or Sovereign Risk • Result of exposure to foreign government which may impose restrictions on repayments to foreigners. • Often lack usual recourse via court system. • Examples: • Argentina • Russia • South Korea • Indonesia • Malaysia • Thailand.

  12. Country or Sovereign Risk • In the event of restrictions, reschedulings, or outright prohibition of repayments, FIs’ remaining bargaining chip is future supply of loans • Weak position if currency collapsing or government failing • Role of IMF • Extends aid to troubled banks • Increased moral hazard problem if IMF bailout expected

  13. Technology and Operational Risk • Economies of scale. • Economies of scope. • Operational risk not exclusively technological • Employee fraud and errors • Losses magnified since they affect reputation and future potential

  14. Technology and Operational Risk • Risk of losses resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people, and systems or from external events. • Some include reputational and strategic risk • Technological innovation has seen rapid growth • Automated clearing houses (ACH) • CHIPS • Real time interconnection of global FIs via satellite systems

  15. Technology and Operational Risk • Risk that technology investment fails to produce anticipated cost savings. • Risk that technology may break down. • CitiBank’s ATM network, debit card system and on-line banking out for two days • Prudential Financial fined $600 million due to allegations of improper mutual fund trades • Bank of America breakdown in security of tapes • Bank of New York: Computer system failed to recognize incoming payment messages sent via Fedwire although outgoing payments succeeded

  16. Liquidity Risk • Risk of being forced to borrow, or sell assets in a very short period of time. • Low prices result. • May generate runs. • Runs may turn liquidity problem into solvency problem. • Risk of systematic bank panics. • Example: 1985, Ohio savings institutions insured by Ohio Deposit Guarantee Fund • Interaction of credit risk and liability risk • Role of FDIC (see Chapter 19)

  17. Insolvency Risk • Risk of insufficient capital to offset sudden decline in value of assets to liabilities. • Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust • Original cause may be excessive interest rate, market, credit, off-balance-sheet, technological, FX, sovereign, and liquidity risks.

  18. Risks of Financial Intermediation • Other Risks and Interaction of Risks • Interdependencies among risks. • Example: Interest rates and credit risk. • Interest rates and derivative counterparty risk • Discrete Risks • Examples include effects of war or terrorist acts, market crashes, theft, malfeasance. • Changes in regulatory policy

  19. Macroeconomic Risks • Increased inflation or increase in its volatility. • Affects interest rates as well. • Increases in unemployment • Affects credit risk as one example.

  20. Pertinent Websites Bank for International Settlements www.bis.org Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve www.federalreserve.gov Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation www.fdic.gov

More Related