Week 3 Risk of Financial Institutions Flashcards

1
Q

Name the risks of financial institutions

A
  • Interest rate risk
  • Market risk
  • Credit risk
  • Country/sovereign risk
  • Foreign exchange risk
  • Liquidity risk
  • Off-balance risk
  • Technology risk
  • Operational risk
  • Insolvency risk
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2
Q

What is interest rate risk?

A

• Interest rate risk is the risk incurred by an FI if it mismatches the maturities of its assets and
liabilities.

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3
Q

explain the 2 types of interest rate risk

A

– Refinancing risk:
the costs of rolling over funds or reborrowing funds will rise above the returns generated
on investments.
(maturity of assets are longer than that of liabilities)

– Reinvestment risk:
the returns on funds to be reinvested will fall below the cost of funds.
(maturity of liabilities are longer than that of assets)

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4
Q

Explain the relationship interest rate movement and market value of asset and liabilities

A

-They have a opposite relationship so:
– As interest rates increase the market value of assets and
liabilities decreases.
– As interest rates decrease the market value of assets and
liabilities increases.

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5
Q

Assuming the maturity of assets > the maturity of liabilities, what effect would an increase and decrease in interest rates have?

A

– An increase in interest rates causes a fall in the market value of
both assets and liabilities, but assets are more severely affected.

– A decrease in interest rates causes an increase in the market
value of both assets and liabilities, and liabilities will increase
less than assets.

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6
Q

Assuming the maturity of assets < the maturity of liabilities, what effect would an increase and decrease in interest rates have?

A

– An increase in interest rates causes a fall in the market value of
both assets and liabilities, and assets will decrease less than
liabilities.

– A decrease in interest rates causes a rise in the market value of
both assets and liabilities, but liabilities will increase more than
assets

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7
Q

How do you protect against interest rate risk?

A
  • Match the maturities of assets and liabilities

• However, balance sheet hedging by matching
maturities of assets and liabilities is problematic for
FIs.
– Lose the asset-transformation function. (May also reduce
profitability.)
– Hedge is done approximately rather than completely due
to different average life/maturity/duration between assets
and liabilities, and the existence of equity.

• For most FIs the maturity of assets exceeds the
maturity of liabilities.

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8
Q

Explain market risk

A

• Market risk is incurred due to changes in
interest rates, exchange rates or other asset
prices when trading assets and liabilities.

• It is the incremental risk incurred when
interest rate, FX and equity return risk are
combined with an active trading strategy that
involves short trading horizons.

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9
Q

How do you protect against market risk?

A
  • FIs should limit positions taken by traders, and to develop models to measure the market risk exposure on a day-to-day basis.
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10
Q

What is credit risk?

A

• This is the risk that promised cash flows on loans and securities held by the FI are not repaid in full

– FIs that make loans or buy bonds with long
maturities are more exposed.

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11
Q

What are the two types of credit risk?

A

– Firm-specific credit risk affects a particular company. It can be managed through diversification.

– Systematic credit risk affects all borrowers.

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12
Q

How do you protect against credit r?isk

A
  • Screening and monitoring loan applicants, efficient and effective credit management, monitoring and enforcement of restrictive covenants, diversification across assets
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13
Q

What is country or sovereign risk?

A
  • The risk that repayments from foreign borrowers may be interrupted because of interference of foreign governments.
  • A different type of credit risk due to adverse political reasons.
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14
Q

explain foreign exchange risk

A

• Foreign exchange risk is the risk that changes in exchange rates may adversely affect the value of an FI’s assets and/or liabilities.

• Arises as part of:
– Foreign exchange trading.
– Holding assets and liabilities in different currencies.
– Having foreign investment which earns profits in foreign currencies.

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15
Q

How do you protect against foreign exchange risk?

A
  • By matching size of foreign assets and liabilities

• Notice that hedging foreign exposure by matching foreign assets and liabilities requires matching the maturities as well. Otherwise, exposure to foreign interest rate risk is created.

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16
Q

What is liquidity risk?

A
  • Liquidity risk is the risk that a sudden surge in liability withdrawals may pressure the FI into liquidating parts of its assets.
  • The liquidation of assets may have to happen in a very short period and at very low prices. It is problematic for illiquid assets such as loans.
17
Q

what do liquidity problems cause a bank?

A

• Serious liquidity problems can cause a “run” on
the FI. A “run” can turn a simple liquidity problem
into a solvency problem, and might threaten the
FI’s survival

18
Q

Explain off balance sheet risk

A

• Arises if FIs enter into contingent liability or asset contracts:
– Letters of credit
– Loan commitments
– Derivative positions

  • Speculative activities using off-balance-sheet items create considerable risk.
  • To account for off-balance-sheet risk, risk-based capital requirements oblige a bank to convert offbalance-sheet activities to “on-balance” equivalents and hold capital against these activities.
19
Q

What does the Bank for International
Settlements (BIS) define operational risk (inclusive of
technological risk)

A

• “the risk of direct or indirect loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people and systems or from external events”.

20
Q

Explain technology risk

A

• the risk incurred by an FI when
technological investments do not produce the cost
savings anticipated.
– Major objectives of technological expansion are to
lower operating costs, increase profits, and/or capture
new markets.
– Economies of scale imply an FI’s ability to lower its
average costs of operations by expanding its output
of financial services.
– Economies of scope imply an FI’s ability to generate
cost synergies by producing more than one output
with the same inputs.

21
Q

Explain operational risk

A

• Operational risk: the risk that existing technology
or support systems may malfunction or break down. It also arises as the result of:
– Business interruptions: from loss or damage to
assets, facilities, systems, or people.
– Transaction processing: from failed, late, or incorrect
settlements.
– Inadequate information systems: in which the security
of data or systems is compromised.
– Breaches in internal controls: resulting in fraud, theft,
or unauthorised activities.
– Client liability: resulting in restitution payments or
reputation losses

22
Q

Explain insolvency risk

A

• The risk that an FI may not have sufficient capital
to offset a sudden decline in its asset values
relative to its liabilities.

• Original cause may be excessive interest rate, or
market, credit, off-balance-sheet, technological,
FX, sovereign, and liquidity risks. The more risk
taken, the greater the amount of capital required.

23
Q

How do you protect against insolvency risk?

A
  • Both FI management and regulators focus on an FI’s capital and capital adequacy as key measures to ensure FI solvency.