FRM handbook Example 15.10: FRM EXAM 2008 - Question 5-8

hello,

The question ask about the expected shortfall and the solution said the VAR is 1428 while the ESF is 1861.

The followings are the sorted 15 worst P&L from 1200 past days data.
-2833, -2333, -2228, -2084, -1960, -1751, -1679, -1558, -1542, -1484, -1450, -1428, 1368, -1346, -1319

According to the handbook definition, ESF = E[-X|X<-VAR]. According to my understanding, If the VAR is 1428, the ESF be computed as [2833+2333+2228+2804+1960+1751+1679+1558+1542+1484+1450]/11 = 1900.181818 which is not the same as the solution suggested.

Another question is that, the VAR is inf{x: P(Loss > x) <= 1-C}, so in the above question, P(Loss > 1368) = 12/1200 = 0.01. I don't understand why the VAR is 1428 instead of 1368.

Many Thanks
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
Hi wingsiu,

The ES formula is as you suggest, but in this case it needs to be the average of the worst 12 losses, not 11, as 12 = 1% * 1,200 observations (this does not depend on the VaR. Rather, it is the average of the lowest 1%, which in this discrete case, must include 12 observations). By my calculations, answer (c) is exactly correct: I get 1,861 as the average of the worst 12 and therefore the 99% ES.
(the explain, i think, is just a means to quickly approximate. The ES does not take a median)

In regard to VaR, technically (i.e., following the assigned Dowd), you are absolutely correct. The best answer for a 99% VaR, in this discrete case, is the 13th worst loss (i.e., 13 = 1%*1200 + 1). However, in this discrete case, the 12th worst is also acceptable, as is an interpolation (e.g., PERCENTILE) between 1368 and 1428.

Hope that helps, David
 
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