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The document discusses credit risk, which is the likelihood of loss due to default or failure of another organization in contractual agreements. It outlines various types of credit risk, including default risk, counterparty risks, legal risk, and concentration risk, as well as management techniques such as credit exposure reduction, diversification, and the use of collateral. Additionally, it emphasizes the importance of formalizing credit risk functions and implementing credit limits to mitigate potential losses.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views4 pages

Module 05 Reviewer

The document discusses credit risk, which is the likelihood of loss due to default or failure of another organization in contractual agreements. It outlines various types of credit risk, including default risk, counterparty risks, legal risk, and concentration risk, as well as management techniques such as credit exposure reduction, diversification, and the use of collateral. Additionally, it emphasizes the importance of formalizing credit risk functions and implementing credit limits to mitigate potential losses.

Uploaded by

khianamaez
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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REVIEWER

Module 5: Credit Risk

Introduction
● Credit risk exists whenever payment or performance to a contractual agreement
by another organization is expected, and it is the likelihood of a loss arising from
default or failure of another organization.
● Credit risk and the methods used to manage it depend to a certain extent on the
size and complexity of exposures.

How Credit Risk Arises?


❖ Through lending, investing, and credit granting activities and concerns the return
of borrowed money or the payment for goods sold.
❖ Through the performance of counterparties in contractual agreements such as
derivatives.
❖ Poor economic conditions and high interest rates contribute to the likelihood of
default.

Credit Risk includes:


● Default Risk
❖ Traditional credit risk involving default on payment, typically related to
lending or sales.
➢ A debt issuer is said to be in default when it indicates it will not
make contractual interest payment to lenders.
❖ Depending on the nature of the lending agreement, the amount at risk
may be as much as the entire liability.
➢ The likelihood of a recovery depends on several factors.
● Counterparty Pre-settlement Risk
❖ Major source of credit risk in financial markets and arises from exposure to
counterparties in financial derivatives (swaps, forwards, and options).
❖ Type of credit risk that arise from transactions with counterparties.
❖ Pre-settlement risk or replacement risk arises from the possibility of
counterparty default once a contract has been entered into but prior to the
settlement.
➢ At the time of default, it might be necessary to enter into a
replacement contract at far less favorable prices.
❖ The risk associated here is that a contract has unrealized gains and the
counterparty’s failure will result in the loss of that benefit
● Counterparty Settlement Risk
❖ Transaction risk arising from the exchange of payments between parties to
an agreement.
❖ Risk that payment is made but not received, and it may result in large
losses because the entire payment is potentially at risk during the
settlement process.
❖ Settlement risk is often associated with foreign exchange trading, where
payments in different money centers are not made simultaneously and
volumes are huge.
➢ Counterparties traditionally pay one another in different currencies,
with most transactions settling one or two days after the trade date.
➢ There is usually a time delay between an organization initiating an
outbound settlement payment and the confirmation of the arrival of
an inbound payment from the organization’s trade counterparty.
● Legal Risk
❖ Risk that an organization is not legally permitted or able to enter into
transactions, particularly derivatives transactions.
❖ It is necessary to assess the underlying legal entity with which a
contractual agreement is undertaken.
● Sovereign or Country Risk
❖ Arises from legal, regulatory, and political exposures in international
transactions.
❖ When transactions in other countries expose an organization to the
restrictions and regulations of foreign governments.
❖ Even a counterparty or debt issuer with a high-quality credit rating can
become problematic if the sovereign government makes it difficult to do
business.
● Concentration Risk
❖ Affects organizations with exposure that is poorly diversified by region or
sector.
➢ Events or market changes may adversely affect all in an industry or
sector.
❖ A bank with a large number of borrowers in a particular industry sector is
vulnerable to industry concentration risk.

Credit Exposure Management


A key credit risk management technique is the reduction of credit exposure. There is
more emphasis on active credit exposure management within financial institutions.
● Formalize the credit risk function. Consider opportunities for
● credit exposure diversification.
● Require settlement and payment techniques that provide
● certainty. Deal with high-quality counterparties.
● Use collateral where appropriate.
● Use netting agreements where possible. Monitor and limit
● market value of outstanding contracts.in financial institutions.

Credit Risk Function


❖ Credit risk management and policy development may be included in the risk
oversight function or, in larger organizations, as a separate function.
➢ Setting appropriate credit exposure limits and monitoring and reporting
exposures against limits on an aggregate, legally enforceable basis
➢ Collateral and other credit enhancement techniques
➢ Credit policy methods
Diversification
❖ Credit committees ensured that credit risk resulting from banking activities was
not excessive.
❖ Financial institutions diversified to the extent possible, within the confines of their
regional businesses and regulatory environment.
❖ It may be undesirable from a business perspective to diversify customers in an
attempt to reduce exposure to the industry, if these customers keep them in
business.
Credit Rationing
❖ Credit is granted where the most attractive risk-to-return tradeoff is available.
➢ Higher interest rates are assigned to higher risk transactions.
➢ Rationing the finite quantity of credit between borrowers with varying credit
risk granted.
Collateral
❖ A repo transaction consists of a sale transaction and a subsequent repurchases
or purchase-and-resale of securities.
❖ Since title to the securities changes the lender is effectively granted collateral
hands over the term of transaction
Netting Agreements
❖ Amounts to be exchanged between counterparties are netted, greatly reducing
the counterparties’ exposure to one another.
❖ Bilateral netting agreements between two financial institutions are done by
adding all payments for a given day and currency pairs, with only the net
payments are paid.
Marking-to-Market
❖ Tool used in conjunction with limits for reducing potential loss.
❖ Outstanding contracts that have large unrealized gains are monitored closely by
periodic marking to market.
❖ In the event that a counterparty’s unrealized losses exceed a predetermined limit,
payment from counterparty with losses can be required to “reset” the rate on the
outstanding contract.
Credit Limits
❖ The use of limits supports and formalizes the principles of diversification.
❖ Financial institutions involved in trading actively use position limits to restrict the
size of a trading position and the loss potential.
➢ Limits for individual traders and trading desks are set based on
experience, performance, risk measurement and modeling, and the
institution’s risk tolerance.
Contingent Actions
❖ Changes to an outstanding contract or agreement based on the occurrence of
certain key events.
❖ Such events are specified in a clause to a contractual agreement and might
include the deterioration of a counterparty’s credit quality, the marked-to-market
value of an outstanding contract exceeding a predetermined amount, or both
Other credit risk management techniques
❖ Secured lending transactions –lending is secured with assets of value.
❖ Credit insurance –receivables insurance provided by a third party to protect
against payment default.
❖ Debt covenants –designed to protect creditors and require a borrower to maintain
certain financial conditions.

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