fullofquestions
New Member
QUESTION
You are hired as the credit risk manager for a large bank. You find that the bank’s credits are poorly
diversified. The bank has an extremely large exposure to one firm with a BB rating. All its other loans
have the equivalent of an AAA rating. You recommend that the bank diversify its credit exposures. After
the bank follows your advice, you are summoned to the CEO’s office and fired. The CEO says that they
followed your advice, acquired many small exposures to firms with BB ratings to replace the large
exposure, and all it did was to make the bank riskier because its credit VaR increased. The bank measures
its credit VaR as the maximum loss of principal over one year at the 1% level. You seek advice from
a consultant to make sure not to repeat the mistake you made. Which of the following explanations
provided by the consultant is correct?
a. VaR necessarily falls as diversification increases. Consequently, the bank’s software to compute VaR
must be flawed.
b. The bank did not diversify since it replaced one exposure with a BB rating with multiple exposures
with a BB rating.
c. The VaR would not have increased had the bank measured it as a shortfall relative to the expected
value of the banking book.
d. The VaR would not have increased had the bank not used the normal distribution for the portfolio
return.
Answer: c
Explanation: By diversifying, the bank swaps the small probability of a large loss for the certainty of a
small loss. Yet, the expected value of the banking book is unchanged and the volatility of the terminal
value of the banking book has fallen.
In broad terms, changing a large exposure with exactly rated smaller exposures that, we can only assume, have the same expected value, should not change the RWA calculation since PD, EAD, LGD and M add up to the same value. Is the explanation also confirming this by saying 'the expected value of the banking book is unchanged'?
In any event, how is the following true? "the volatility of the terminal value (I guess another way of saying at time t = T) of the banking book has fallen"
Anyway, the answer clearly states that Credit VaR increased. What I don't understand is what answer c tries to accomplish. To compute Credit VaR we are indeed computing the shortfall relative to the value of the Banking Book (Trading book does not factor into credit risk). Please advise.
You are hired as the credit risk manager for a large bank. You find that the bank’s credits are poorly
diversified. The bank has an extremely large exposure to one firm with a BB rating. All its other loans
have the equivalent of an AAA rating. You recommend that the bank diversify its credit exposures. After
the bank follows your advice, you are summoned to the CEO’s office and fired. The CEO says that they
followed your advice, acquired many small exposures to firms with BB ratings to replace the large
exposure, and all it did was to make the bank riskier because its credit VaR increased. The bank measures
its credit VaR as the maximum loss of principal over one year at the 1% level. You seek advice from
a consultant to make sure not to repeat the mistake you made. Which of the following explanations
provided by the consultant is correct?
a. VaR necessarily falls as diversification increases. Consequently, the bank’s software to compute VaR
must be flawed.
b. The bank did not diversify since it replaced one exposure with a BB rating with multiple exposures
with a BB rating.
c. The VaR would not have increased had the bank measured it as a shortfall relative to the expected
value of the banking book.
d. The VaR would not have increased had the bank not used the normal distribution for the portfolio
return.
Answer: c
Explanation: By diversifying, the bank swaps the small probability of a large loss for the certainty of a
small loss. Yet, the expected value of the banking book is unchanged and the volatility of the terminal
value of the banking book has fallen.
In broad terms, changing a large exposure with exactly rated smaller exposures that, we can only assume, have the same expected value, should not change the RWA calculation since PD, EAD, LGD and M add up to the same value. Is the explanation also confirming this by saying 'the expected value of the banking book is unchanged'?
In any event, how is the following true? "the volatility of the terminal value (I guess another way of saying at time t = T) of the banking book has fallen"
Anyway, the answer clearly states that Credit VaR increased. What I don't understand is what answer c tries to accomplish. To compute Credit VaR we are indeed computing the shortfall relative to the value of the Banking Book (Trading book does not factor into credit risk). Please advise.