Counterparty credit risk : the new challenge for global financial markets
著者
書誌事項
Counterparty credit risk : the new challenge for global financial markets
(Wiley finance series)
J. Wiley, 2010
- : hard
大学図書館所蔵 全7件
  青森
  岩手
  宮城
  秋田
  山形
  福島
  茨城
  栃木
  群馬
  埼玉
  千葉
  東京
  神奈川
  新潟
  富山
  石川
  福井
  山梨
  長野
  岐阜
  静岡
  愛知
  三重
  滋賀
  京都
  大阪
  兵庫
  奈良
  和歌山
  鳥取
  島根
  岡山
  広島
  山口
  徳島
  香川
  愛媛
  高知
  福岡
  佐賀
  長崎
  熊本
  大分
  宮崎
  鹿児島
  沖縄
  韓国
  中国
  タイ
  イギリス
  ドイツ
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. [405]-409) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
The first decade of the 21st Century has been disastrous for financial institutions, derivatives and risk management. Counterparty credit risk has become the key element of financial risk management, highlighted by the bankruptcy of the investment bank Lehman Brothers and failure of other high profile institutions such as Bear Sterns, AIG, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The sudden realisation of extensive counterparty risks has severely compromised the health of global financial markets. Counterparty risk is now a key problem for all financial institutions. This book explains the emergence of counterparty risk during the recent credit crisis. The quantification of firm-wide credit exposure for trading desks and businesses is discussed alongside risk mitigation methods such as netting and collateral management (margining). Banks and other financial institutions have been recently developing their capabilities for pricing counterparty risk and these elements are considered in detail via a characterisation of credit value adjustment (CVA). The implications of an institution valuing their own default via debt value adjustment (DVA) are also considered at length.
Hedging aspects, together with the associated instruments such as credit defaults swaps (CDSs) and contingent CDS (CCDS) are described in full. A key feature of the credit crisis has been the realisation of wrong-way risks illustrated by the failure of monoline insurance companies. Wrong-way counterparty risks are addressed in detail in relation to interest rate, foreign exchange, commodity and, in particular, credit derivative products. Portfolio counterparty risk is covered, together with the regulatory aspects as defined by the Basel II capital requirements. The management of counterparty risk within an institution is also discussed in detail. Finally, the design and benefits of central clearing, a recent development to attempt to control the rapid growth of counterparty risk, is considered. This book is unique in being practically focused but also covering the more technical aspects. It is an invaluable complete reference guide for any market practitioner with any responsibility or interest within the area of counterparty credit risk.
目次
Acknowledgements. List of Spreadsheets. List of Abbreviations. Introduction. 1 Setting the Scene. 1.1 Financial risk management. 1.2 The failure of models. 1.3 The derivatives market. 1.4 Risks of derivatives. 1.5 Counterparty risk in context. 2 Defining Counterparty Credit Risk. 2.1 Introducing counterparty risk. 2.2 Components and terminology. 2.3 Controlling counterparty credit risk. 2.4 Quantifying counterparty risk. 2.5 Metrics for credit exposure. 2.6 Summary. Appendix 2.A Characterising exposure for a normal distribution. 3 Mitigating Counterparty Credit Risk. 3.1 Introduction. 3.2 Default-remote entities. 3.3 Termination and walkaway features. 3.4 Netting and close-out. 3.5 Netting and exposure. 3.6 Collateral. 3.7 The mechanics of collateralisation. 3.8 Is risk mitigation always a good thing? 3.9 Summary. Appendix 3.A EE of independent normal variables. 4 Quantifying Counterparty Credit Exposure, I. 4.1 Quantifying credit exposure. 4.2 Typical credit exposures. 4.3 Models for credit exposure. 4.4 Netting. 4.5 Exposure contributions. 4.6 Summary. Appendix 4.A Semi-analytical formula for exposure of a forward contract. Appendix 4.B Computing marginal EE. 5 Quantifying Counterparty Credit Exposure, II: The Impact of Collateral. 5.1 Introduction. 5.2 The impact of collateral on credit exposure. 5.3 Modelling collateral. 5.4 Full collateralisation. 5.5 The risks of collateralisation. 5.6 Summary. Appendix 5.A Calculation of collateralised PFE (cash collateral). Appendix 5.B Calculation of collateralised netted exposure with collateral value uncertainty. Appendix 5.C Mathematical treatment of a collateralised exposure. 6 Overview of Credit Risk and Credit Derivatives. 6.1 Defaults, recovery rates, credit spreads and credit derivatives. 6.2 Credit derivatives. 6.3 Credit default swaps. 6.4 Estimating default probability. 6.5 Portfolio credit derivatives. Appendix 6.A Defining survival and default probabilities. Appendix 6.B Pricing formulas for CDSs and risky bonds. Appendix 6.C Pricing of index tranches. 7 Pricing Counterparty Credit Risk, I. 7.1 Pricing counterparty risk. 7.2 Pricing new trades using CVA. 7.3 Bilateral counterparty risk. 7.4 Summary. Appendix 7.A Deriving the equation for credit value adjustment (CVA). Appendix 7.B Approximation to the CVA formula in the case of no wrong-way risk. Appendix 7.C Approximation linking CVA formula to credit spread. Appendix 7.D Specific approximations to the CVA formula for individual instruments. Appendix 7.E Calculation of CVA increase in the presence of netting. Appendix 7.F Deriving the equation for bilateral credit value adjustment (BCVA). Appendix 7.G Approximation linking CVA formula to credit spreads for bilateral CVA. Appendix 7.H Deriving the equation for BCVA under the assumption of a bilateral walkaway clause. 8 Pricing Counterparty Credit Risk, II: Wrong-way Risk. 8.1 Introduction. 8.2 Wrong-way risk. 8.3 Measuring wrong-way risk. 8.4 Counterparty risk in CDSs. 8.5 Counterparty risk in structured credit. 8.6 Counterparty risk and gap risk. 8.7 Super senior risk. 8.8 Summary. Appendix 8.A Computing the EE of a typical forward exposure with correlation to a time of default. Appendix 8.B Formula for a risky option. Appendix 8.C Formula for pricing a CDS contract with counterparty risk. Appendix 8.D Pricing of a leveraged super senior tranche. 9 Hedging Counterparty Risk. 9.1 Introduction. 9.2 Hedging and pricing. 9.3 Hedging a risky derivative position. 9.4 Traditional hedging of bonds, loans and repos. 9.5 Risk-neutral or real parameters? 9.6 Components of CVA. 9.7 Recovery risk. 9.8 Static hedging. 9.9 Dynamic credit hedging. 9.10 Exposure. 9.11 Cross-dependency. 9.12 Aggregation of sensitivities. 9.13 Summary. Appendix 9.A Example of calculation of CVA Greeks. 10 Portfolio Models and Economic Capital. 10.1 Introduction. 10.2 Joint default. 10.3 Credit portfolio losses. 10.4 The impact of stochastic exposure. 10.5 Special cases of alpha. 10.6 Credit migration and mark-to-market. 10.7 Summary. Appendix 10.A Credit portfolio model. Appendix 10.B Simple treatment of wrong-way risk. 11 Counterparty Risk, Regulation and Basel II. 11.1 Introduction. 11.2 The birth of Basel II. 11.3 Basel II Framework for fixed exposures. 11.4 Exposure at default and Basel II. 11.5 Basel II internal model method. 11.6 Basel II and double-default. 11.7 Summary. Appendix 11.A Effective remaining maturity. Appendix 11.B The asset correlation and maturity adjustment formulas in the advanced IRB approach of Basel II. Appendix 11.C Netting and collateral treatment under the current exposure method (CEM) of Basel II. Appendix 11.D Definition of effective EPE. Appendix 11.E Double-default treatment of hedged exposures in Basel II. 12 Managing Counterparty Risk in a Financial Institution. 12.1 Introduction. 12.2 Counterparty risk in financial institutions. 12.3 Insurance company or trading desk? 12.4 How to calculate credit charges. 12.5 How to charge for counterparty risk. 12.6 Summary. 13 Counterparty Risk of Default-remote Entities. 13.1 The triple-A counterparty. 13.2 The value of monolines and CDPCs. 13.3 Summary. Appendix 13.A Simple model for a credit insurer. Appendix 13.B The valuation of credit insurer purchased protection. 14 The Role of a Central Counterparty. 14.1 Centralised clearing. 14.2 The viability of centralised clearing. 14.3 Conclusions. 15 The Future of Counterparty Risk. 15.1 A counterparty risk revolution? 15.2 Controlling credit exposure. 15.3 Collateral management. 15.4 The too-big-to-fail concept. 15.5 Credit value adjustment (CVA). 15.6 Hedging. 15.7 Credit derivatives. 15.8 Central counterparties. 15.9 The overall challenge. Glossary. References. Index.
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