1 / 15

Managing Risks in Financial Institutions (1)

Managing Risks in Financial Institutions (1). Managing Credit Risks Managing Interest Rate Risks Income Gap Analysis Duration Gap Analysis. Managing Credit Risk. Solving Asymmetric Information Problems 1. Screening 2. Monitoring and Enforcement of Restrictive Covenants

thuong
Download Presentation

Managing Risks in Financial Institutions (1)

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. Managing Risks in Financial Institutions (1) • Managing Credit Risks • Managing Interest Rate Risks • Income Gap Analysis • Duration Gap Analysis

  2. Managing Credit Risk • Solving Asymmetric Information Problems • 1. Screening • 2. Monitoring and Enforcement of Restrictive Covenants • 3. Establish Long-Term Customer Relationships • 4. Loan Commitment Arrangements • 5. Collateral and Compensating Balances • 6. Credit Rationing

  3. Benefit of Long-Term Relationship • Reducing the cost of information collection -- check firms’ past activities • Reducing monitoring costs • Reducing borrowers’ moral hazard when they want to preserve a long-term relationship

  4. Loan Commitments • Banks’ commitment to provide a firm with loans up to a given amount at fixed interest rate or at a rate that is tied to some market interest rates • Promote long-term relationship • Collateral requirement / Secured Loans • Collateral is a property promised to the lender as compensation if the borrow defaults • Reducing adverse selection

  5. Compensating Balances • A firm receiving a loan must keep a required minimum amount of funds in a check account at the bank • serving as collateral • monitoring • Credit Rationing • lenders refuse to make loans even though borrows are willing to pay the stated interest rate or even a higher rate • two types: (1) no loan; (2) loan with restricted size • Deal with Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard

  6. Managing Interest Rate Risks Income Gap Analysis Duration Gap Analysis

  7. Managing Interest-Rate Risk • First National Bank • Assets Liabilities • --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- • Reserves and cash items $ 5 m | Checkable deposits $ 15 m • | • Securities | Money market deposit accounts $ 5 m • less than 1 year $ 5 m | • 1 to 2 year $ 5 m | Savings deposits $ 15 m • greater than 2 year $ 10 m | • | CDs: Variable-rate $10 m • Residential mortgages | less than 1 year $ 15 m • Variable rate $ 10 m | 1 to 2 year $ 5 m • Fixed rate (30 year) $ 10 m | greater than 2 year $ 5 m • | • Commercial Loans | Fed funds $ 5 m • less than 1 year $ 15 m | • 1 to 2 year $ 10 m | Borrowings: less than 1 year $10 m • greater than 2 year $ 25 m | 1 to 2 year $ 5 m • | greater than 2 year $ 5 m • Physical capital $ 5 m | • | Bank capital $ 5 m

  8. Income Gap Analysis • identifying rate sensitive assets and liabilities • finding GAP = RSA – RSL • Income change = GAP * • About reinvestment risk

  9. Income Gap Analysis • Rate-Sensitive Assets = $5m + $ 10m + $15m + 20% x $10m • RSA = $32 m • Rate-Sensitive Liabs = $5m + $25m + $5m+ $10m + 10% x $15m • + 20%x$15m • RSL = $49.5 m • i  5%  • ΔAsset Income = • ΔLiability Costs = • ΔIncome = • If RSL > RSA, i , Income • GAP = RSA - RSL • = • ΔIncome = GAP x Δi • =

  10. Duration Gap Analysis • Examining the sensitivity of market value of financial • institutions’ net worth to changes in interest rate • %P = -DUR* i/(1+i) • if we know the duration of assets and liabilities, we could • calculate the change in net worth due to interest rate change • duration is additive – using market values as weights • DURgap = DURa - [L/A x DURl]

  11. Example • Interest rate rise from 10% to 15% • Total asset value $100 million • Total liability value $95 million • Durations for each asset and liability as illustrated in Table 1

  12. Duration Gap Analysis • %ΔP - DUR x Δi/(1+i) • i 5%, from 10% to 15%  • ΔAsset Value = %ΔP x Assets • ΔLiability Value = %ΔP x Liabilities • ΔNW = • DURgap = DURa - [L/A x DURl] • %ΔNW = - DURgap x Δi/(1+i) • ΔNW =

  13. Managing Interest-Rate Risk • Problems with GAP Analysis • 1. Assumes slope of yield curve unchanged and flat • 2. Manager estimates % of fixed rate assets and liabilities that are rate sensitive

  14. Managing Interest-Rate Risk • Strategies for Managing Interest-Rate Risk • To completely immunize net worth from interest-rate risk, set DURgap = 0

More Related