Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | HD 61 .G54 2000 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 618256 |
HD 61 .C668 2015 Understanding financial risk management / | HD 61 .E44 2011 Emerging risks : a strategic management guide / | HD 61 .G35 2003 Risk management and capital adequacy / | HD 61 .G54 2000 Risk : the new management imperative in finance / | HD 61 .H345 2009 Harvard business review on managing external risk. | HD 61 .H567 2012 Fundamentals of risk management : understanding evaluating and implementing effective risk management / | HD 61 .J67 2009 Financial risk manager handbook / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 253-260) and index.
Risk Management Transparency -- The Spectrum of Risks Chart -- The Risks and Their Contours -- Global Risk Management's Emergence -- Technology and Communications -- Quantitative Models -- Dealers in Flux, Too -- Major Messages in This Book -- The Full Spectrum of Risks -- Operational Risk -- Other Nonfinancial Risks -- The Contours of Financial Risk -- Funding Risk--The Primal Arc -- Markets and Risk -- Basis Risk -- Alternative Views and Insights -- New Measurement Tools and Management Techniques -- Credit Risk -- The Contours of Credit Risk -- Portfolio Risk -- Our Journey -- Market Risk Management -- Market Risk: Tools and Uses -- Hedge Example -- Arbitrage -- Speculation -- Commodity Market Risk Management -- Case Study: Big Auto Co. -- Case Study: Innovative Enron -- Commodity Market Features -- Wrap-Up -- Currency Market Risk Management -- Market Dynamics -- Valuation and Risk Mechanics -- Risk Illustrations -- End Users -- Intermediaries -- Fixed-Income Market Risk Management -- Market Dynamics -- Time Matters -- Valuation -- Risk Mechanics -- Risk Illustrations -- Corporate Users -- Dealers -- The Investors -- Equity Market Risk Management -- Valuation and Risk Mechanics -- Risk Illustration -- Equity Derivatives -- Dealers and End Users -- Credit Risk Management -- The Schism in Credit Risk Management -- Credit Risk Management Difficulties -- Credit Risk Management for Trading -- The Variable Exposure Problem -- Pre-Settlement and Settlement Risk -- Monte Carlo Simulation -- Credit Risk versus Exposure -- Credit Limit Problems -- Charging for Credit -- Systemic Concerns -- Credit Risk Management for Traditional Lending -- The Traditional Credit Process: Commercial Loans -- Competition and Change to the Process -- Summary of Changes to the Process -- The Prior Models for Credit Risk -- The New Models for Credit Risk -- Case Study: Bank of Montreal -- Credit Market Trends -- Risk In Portfolios -- Market Risk in Portfolios -- Portfolio Risk Measures: Their Evolution -- Forecasting for VaR -- VaR Summary -- Stress Testing -- The Lessons of 1998 -- Simulation -- Case Study: Global Oil Co. -- Developing a Global Risk Management Process -- Risk Management: The Vision and the Reality -- The Vision for Risk Management: Go Global -- The Reality at Global Financial Institutions -- The Global Risk Management Development Model -- Management Direction -- Risk Management Development Projects -- Integrating with the Operating Infrastructure -- Wrap-Up -- Developing GRM: What Works, What Doesn't -- The Chase Example -- Features of Success -- Pitfalls to Avoid -- The Ten Commandments for Going Global with Risk.
Advances in technology and risk modeling have boosted derivative markets. The resulting increase in arbitrage activities has narrowed profit margins in all financial markets. Consistent risk methodology is now an essential tool for overcoming competitive pricing and for anticipating the consequences of market turbulence.
It is now possible to calculate the potential impact of every major deal on the overall risk profile of the firm. Market risk and credit risk can be quantified and considered against the expected contribution to shareholder value or return on capital. These measurements create a theoretical framework for harmonizing activity at financial firms.
In practice, however, today's markets and technologies evolve so rapidly that the requirements and the capabilities shift before any reengineering cycle can be completed. A quagmire of data seriously confounds the task of extracting reliable information for risk management. The data problem becomes acute when you move to global risk management, because a flaw anywhere affects the whole process and is much harder to trace.
Timely, accurate information about all positions is a prerequisite for effective management in this new global marketplace. You can't run flexible "what if" stress tests or determine global VaR (value at risk) accurately without a central transaction file. When the next contagion hits, the winners will be the ones who have correctly measured the stress on their whole portfolio and adjusted their holdings to achieve some immunization.
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