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Assessing the suitability of regulatory asset correlations applied to South African loan losses / Hestia Jacomina StoffbergStoffberg, Hestia Jacomina January 2015 (has links)
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) designed the Internal Ratings Based (IRB) approach, which is based on a single risk factor model. This IRB approach was de-signed to determine banks’ regulatory capital for credit risk. The asymptotic single risk factor (ASRF) model they used makes use of prescribed asset correlations, which banks must use for their credit risk regulatory capital, in order to abide by the BCBS’s rules. Banks need to abide by these rules to reach an international standard of banking that promotes the health of the specific bank. To evaluate whether these correlations are as conservative as the BCBS intended, i.e. not too onerous or too lenient, empirical asset correlations embedded in gross loss data, spanning different economic milieus, were backed out of the regulatory credit risk model.
A technique to extract these asset correlations from a Vasicek distribution of empirical loan losses was proposed and tested in international markets. This technique was used to extract the empirical asset correlation, and then compare the prescribed correlations for developed (US) and developing (South Africa) economies over the total time period, as well as a rolling time period. For the first analysis, the BCBS’s asset correlation was conservative when com-pared to South Africa and the US for all loan types. Comparing the empirical asset correlation over a seven-year rolling time period for South Africa and the BCBS, the specified asset cor-relation was found to be as conservative as the BCBS intended. Comparing the US empirical asset correlation for the same rolling period to that of the BCBS, it was found that for all loans, the BCBS was conservative, up until 2012. In 2012 the empirical asset correlation sur-passed that of the BCBS, and thus the BCBS was not as conservative as they had originally intended. / MCom (Risk Management), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
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Assessing the suitability of regulatory asset correlations applied to South African loan losses / Hestia Jacomina StoffbergStoffberg, Hestia Jacomina January 2015 (has links)
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) designed the Internal Ratings Based (IRB) approach, which is based on a single risk factor model. This IRB approach was de-signed to determine banks’ regulatory capital for credit risk. The asymptotic single risk factor (ASRF) model they used makes use of prescribed asset correlations, which banks must use for their credit risk regulatory capital, in order to abide by the BCBS’s rules. Banks need to abide by these rules to reach an international standard of banking that promotes the health of the specific bank. To evaluate whether these correlations are as conservative as the BCBS intended, i.e. not too onerous or too lenient, empirical asset correlations embedded in gross loss data, spanning different economic milieus, were backed out of the regulatory credit risk model.
A technique to extract these asset correlations from a Vasicek distribution of empirical loan losses was proposed and tested in international markets. This technique was used to extract the empirical asset correlation, and then compare the prescribed correlations for developed (US) and developing (South Africa) economies over the total time period, as well as a rolling time period. For the first analysis, the BCBS’s asset correlation was conservative when com-pared to South Africa and the US for all loan types. Comparing the empirical asset correlation over a seven-year rolling time period for South Africa and the BCBS, the specified asset cor-relation was found to be as conservative as the BCBS intended. Comparing the US empirical asset correlation for the same rolling period to that of the BCBS, it was found that for all loans, the BCBS was conservative, up until 2012. In 2012 the empirical asset correlation sur-passed that of the BCBS, and thus the BCBS was not as conservative as they had originally intended. / MCom (Risk Management), North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
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Essays in dependence and optimality in large portfolios.Castro Iragorri, Carlos 11 January 2010 (has links)
This thesis is composed of three chapters. The first two chapters provides novel approaches for
modeling and estimating the dependence structure for a large portfolio of assets using rating data.
In both chapters a natural form of organizing a portfolio in terms of the levels of exposure to economic sectors and geographical regions, plays a key role in setting up the dependence structure.
The last chapter investigates weather financial strategies that exploit sector or geographical heterogeneity in the asset space are relevant in terms of portfolio optimization. This is also done in a context of a large portfolio but with data on stock returns.
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Pricing of exotic options under the Kou model by using the Laplace transformDzharayan, Gayk, Voronova, Elena January 2011 (has links)
In this thesis we present the Laplace transform method of option pricing and it's realization, also compare it with another methods. We consider vanilla and exotic options, but more attention we pay to the two-asset correlation options. We chose the one of the modifications of Black-Scholes model, the Kou double exponential jump-diffusion model with the double exponential distribution of jumps, as model of the underlying stock prices development. The computations was done by the Laplace transform and it's inversion by the Euler method. We will present in details proof of finding Laplace transforms of put and call two-asset correlation options, the calculations of the moment generation function of the jump-diffusion by Levy-Khintchine formulae in cases without jumps and with independent jumps, and direct calculation of the risk-neutral expectation by solving double integral. Our work also contains the programme code for two-asset correlation call and put options. We will show the realization of our programme in the real data. As a result we see how our model complies on the NASDAQ OMX Stock-holm Market, considering the two-asset correlation options on three cases by stock prices of Handelsbanken, Ericsson and index OMXS30.
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資產相關性 : 以台灣金融業為例 / Asset Correlation : Taiwan Banking Industry study case施畊宇, Shih,Keng-Yu Unknown Date (has links)
This paper emphasis on the importance of default correlation, and also illustrate how the concept is connected with the Basel Ⅱ framework’s intention. Moreover, the paper brought out the different methodologies used by practitioners to arrive at the default correlation calculation, namely, the dispute between asset correlation and equity correlation. Furthermore, based on the model proposed by Hamerle, Liebig, and Scheule (2004), a panel logit model is set up to capture the relationship between the default events and the risk components endured by the specific industry. The model is therefore used to test the applicability of such model using Taiwan’s banking industry data. The result is consistent with our expectation about including the macroeconomic variables which will help to explain the default events happened within the banking industry. But, to my surprise, the proposition about the contemporary systematic random risk effect seems to be insignificant and a fixed effect is suggested to be assumed instead.
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Essays in dependence and optimality in large portfoliosCastro, Carlos 11 January 2010 (has links)
This thesis is composed of three chapters. The first two chapters provides novel approaches for<p>modeling and estimating the dependence structure for a large portfolio of assets using rating data.<p>In both chapters a natural form of organizing a portfolio in terms of the levels of exposure to economic sectors and geographical regions, plays a key role in setting up the dependence structure.<p>The last chapter investigates weather financial strategies that exploit sector or geographical heterogeneity in the asset space are relevant in terms of portfolio optimization. This is also done in a context of a large portfolio but with data on stock returns. / Doctorat en Sciences économiques et de gestion / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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