Recently, I have focused on risk production and control.

 

Reading through the various regulations and proposals, errors, in the market and credit risk production itself, fall into, and get a little lost within, the op risk side of life. My main issue with this is that far from being an economic capital driver, good risk production control is the central plank in establishing an adoptable risk culture in any firm.

 

My main fear is that the general, and understandable, focus on meeting the regulatory changes has been at the cost of moving forward with better risk controls.

 

Effectively, if the lack of risk as a cultural imperative within financial firms is a major contributor to the recent crisis, then its correction should be a major driver in the aftermath. It is difficult to see how there can be any serious adoption, or buy in, from the stakeholders of risk, if the numbers themselves cannot be trusted, or at least correct quickly, once errors have been detected.

 

From what I have read, most of the control functions are around the trading itself, with risk incentives being in the form of punative measures such as CVA or IRC (sticks rather than carrots). On the risk side itself, it has all been about the capital numbers (again, sticks over carrots), with CVA, IRC, Stressed VaR, DSR etc.

 

I have always felt that making the risk numbers useful from a strategic point of view, which means that they are genuinely useful in terms of planning, would put risk at the heart of a firm in a far more 'sticky way' than simply making it a capital issue (which leads, in part, to increasing product sophistication and model/complexity arbitrage). It does require, however, that the numbers are either correct, or quickly correctable, and therefore trusted.

 

As I said, this has been a main focus for me and my firm for a while. i would love to hear other folks opinions.

You need to be a member of Global Risk Community to add comments!

Join Global Risk Community

Votes: 0
Email me when people reply –

Replies

  • I've been working on linking Finance to quality management in organizations. I see this as a big problem to effective operation of a company and yes to the bottom line. (My new book "Competitive Advantage: Linking Management Systems" is due out momentarily. As to the posting, I'd like a definition of the terms

    CVA, IRC, VaR, DSR  and a description of the roles they play in an organizations finances and management.

  • I shall rename :-
    - culture adoption, of risk management, of production control as "Core", and
    - capital issue as "Periphery".
    Both are Insight-Building Models based on past, present and extrapolation of the future, for which Core relates to macroeconomic and microeconomic (but I'm limiting my discussion to macro only) whilst Periphery relates to sub-problems of the macroeconomic.
     
    a) The Problem with Core :-
    We are too far from absolute truth to be so specialised and to make the kind of confident quantitative claims that often emerge from Core since it is built on supposedly "micro-founded" calibrations of key parameters that are definitely on the surreal side ie by not taking Periphery considerations, the model narrows the parameter to certain values. This is notwithstanding the quantitative mathematical formalisations of Core where what's mathematically equivalent may not be psychologically so.

    b) Policy Implications of Confusing Environment :-
    How do we go about doing policy analysis in models with some loosely specified blocks not pinned down to specific areas of our interest eg the centrality of surprises in financial and economic crises seems discouraging since it would seem that it is difficult to fight something that is essentially impossible to predict, that keeps changing, and that is not understood until after it happens thereby giving rise to improvise policy.

    c) The Problem with Periphery :-
    Is not the model itself (VAR, CVAR, Stressed VAR, GARCH etc etc), it is Data Reliability (DR). Without DR, it is literally impossible to work !!! Risk data are sitting in a number of silos across the globe without any viable way of aggregating them in a useful way. This data includes "monopoly" info from key central banks that needs to be integrated and managed along with all financial institutions including hedge funds.
    On the assumption that the framework created jointly by Dodd-Frank and the proposals from the Financial Stability Board, IMF, and Basel III (amongst others), will address the data reliability issue (which I doubt since it does not incorporate those data from MOF Japan - the largest FX derivative market in the world due to the yen carry trade), the other problems include :-
    - unless the safety net is backed by solid crisis planning, cumulative extensions of the safety net are apt to result in less frequent but more devastating crises,
    - the more effective a nation's safety net becomes, the less likely that regulatory personnel will have prior hands-on experience in coping with the severity of crisis pressures, and
    - redesigning regulatory schemes and relocating bureaucratic responsibilities for different features of the safety net will not by itself do much to slow processes of regulatory arbitrage.
    I'm afraid to say that Core will only be useful under the following assumptions :-
    a) globalisation is dead or "prison" economy, 
    b) markets are deeply embedded in systems of governance, and 
    c) democratic governance organises within national political communities eg EU.

    Welcome to the Real World.
This reply was deleted.

Introducing the Global Risk Series - Book 1 Risk Management How Tos

Dear GlobalRisk Community member, Our community’s mission is to foster business, networking and educational explorations among members. Learn from some of the top experts in the industry as they clearly explain how to approach the most important Risk management concepts. Check out their expert tips and use the link at the end of each article to navigate back to the website to leave your comment or ask a question.   Some of the topics include: How do you Explain Risk Appetite?  How to Prepare a…

Read more…
16 Replies · Reply by GlobalRiskCommunity Mar 21
Views: 1106

[Free COVID-19 Framework] What's the path to recovery look like?

We created a free presentation (attached), which discusses both global and organizational impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, along with critical actions organizations should take immediately. This presentation introduces a framework that helps regions and organizations navigate a path to recovery via 9 potential scenarios. These scenarios capture outcomes related to GDP impact, public health response, and economic policies. The presentation also breaks down 6 immediate and critical actions…

Read more…
4 Replies · Reply by Steve Diaz Jul 8, 2023
Views: 236

If risk management is about decision making, are current risk management solutions irrelevant?

Now that the updated COSO and ISO risk management standards emphasize a connection to enterprise objectives and decision making, does this mean ERM and GRC solutions focused on risk registers and regulatory compliance are missing the true value of risk management?Will current risk management solutions evolve to integrate more decision support functionality or will standalone prescriptive analytics and other technology solutions take a more prominent role in enabling risk-informed…

Read more…
3 Replies
Views: 163

A question related to classification of instruments between trading and banking book.

We have an interesting question from one of our members.       "We usually perform OTC FX transactions with clients backed-to-back on the market (with Banks). Now we are going to perform a FX swap (i.e. Spot + forward) JPY/EUR for the Bank account for 1 week at the longest. The purpose is to get EUR place @ CB for LCR compliance purpose (no trading purposes). Bank's Management think that this should be considered as a trading position and therefore be classified within the Bank's trading book.…

Read more…
5 Replies · Reply by Prisha Singh Dec 26, 2023
Views: 372

Plunging oil prices: curse or blessing in disguise?

The recent sudden crash of oil prices has had a major impact on the world economy, leading to many troubled faces in the international arena. The Russians fear the effects of yet another powerful hit on their economy, Venezuela seems to be considering default and the Americans are weary of the consequences for its young and emerging shale oil industry. And then you have the Middle East, where the smallest match is enough to ignite the largest fire. But are these worries really justified or…

Read more…
1 Reply
Views: 106

    About Us

    The GlobalRisk Community is a thriving community of risk managers and associated service providers. Our purpose is to foster business, networking and educational explorations among members. Our goal is to be the worlds premier Risk forum and contribute to better understanding of the complex world of risk.

    Business Partners

    For companies wanting to create a greater visibility for their products and services among their prospects in the Risk market: Send your business partnership request by filling in the form here!

lead