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Quantification of Credit Risk (Croatian perspective). Stjepan Anić, Dejan Donev Erste & Steiermärkische Bank d . d. ToC. 1. Components of Credit risk. 2. Quantification - You can manage what you can measure. 3. First thing’s first - Scoring & Rating Models.
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Quantification of Credit Risk(Croatian perspective) Stjepan Anić, Dejan DonevErste & Steiermärkische Bank d.d.
ToC 1. Components of Credit risk 2. Quantification - You can manage what you can measure 3. First thing’s first - Scoring & Rating Models 4. Tasks of a modern risk manager 5. Required Competences
Risk Components Risk (two components) Uncertainty Exposure Regulatory acknowledged types of risk Operational Risk Market Risk Credit Risk Exposure Uncertainty Recovery risk Default risk
You can manage what you can measure Credit Risk Uncertainty Exposure Recovery risk Default risk LGDk,j= f ( k, j ) k = 1, ... , p; j=1, ... , q ( p no. of collateral types q no. of types of facilities) EaD = f ( i , j ) l = 1, ... , r ( r no. of clients ) PDi = f i(Rating grade) i = 1, ... , n ( nnumber of exposure classes )
Scoring & Rating Models • Credit quality of a client is analyzed, modeled and ranked • Credit Scoring Transformation of input variables describing banks’ client in numbers, sum of which (credit score) gives numeric estimate of his credit quality • Privates socio-demographic data • Corporates financial ratios • Credit Rating grouping of score bins (plus some other things) • Predictive aspect of score/rating forecast default tendency of a client within the one year horizon (PD scoring/rating)
Problem with data WARNING ! • Experience shows that many problems emerge from unsatisfactory quality and availability of data • Modelsare as good and accurate as are the data on which they are developed • Time needed for preparation of raw data for the purposes of modeling is usually dramatically underestimated (during the phase of project planning)
Scoring Model development t+12 m t Loan applications / Annual financial statements Not defaulted Binomial event Defaulted
Methodology • Data mining • Techniques used to find patterns and relations within the data • Proper usage of DM techniques for model building requires knowledge about business problem we’re trying to solve Statistics Data-bases Data Mining Machine learning Visualisation IT technology
Tasks of a modern risk manager • IDENTIFICATION OF RISK RELEVANT INFORMATION creating a list of necessary RM measures and procedures for all types of products and clients • PROPER RECORDING OF IDENTIFIED INFORMATION Centralized Risk DWH Data–collection in hands of people which understand the data and their usage • CALCULATION OF RISK PARAMETERS transformation of recorded info into prediction of possible losses (construction of a probability of loss distribution) • INTERPRETATION AND USAGE OF RESULTS RM must insure that resulting risk parameters (PD, EL, CapReq, etc.) are used throughout the bank in a consistent manner (loan decisioning, portfolio mngmt, planning, provisioning, pricing, etc.)
Required Competences • TECHNICAL EXPERTISE IT competences (knowing how to retrieve data from data-bases, SQL, basic programming skills - VBA) • METHODOLOGICAL EXPERTISE skills in quantitative analytical modeling (mathematical and statistical modeling, econometrics) and skills in predictive data-mining (SAS, MATLAB, SPSS, etc.) • BUSINESS EXPERTISE knowing the business (banking & finance, risk management, CRM, etc.) • ANALYTICAL (AND ABSTRACT THINKING) MINDSET can transform business problemsinto abstract terms and solve them like mathematical problems in algorithmic form • MODERN RM ENVIRONMENT = CROSS-FUNCTIONAL TEAMS
Analytical expertise Technical expertise Methodological expertise Business expertise Four major competences
All four planets in this Risk Orbit have to function perfectly, otherwise we could be facing... consequences of truly cosmic proportions !