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Risk Measures for the 21st Century (The Wiley Finance Series)
 
 
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Risk Measures for the 21st Century (The Wiley Finance Series) [Hardcover]

Giorgio Szegö (Editor)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

April 26, 2004 0470861541 978-0470861547 1
The last five years have witnessed a great momentum in the research into measures of financial risk. After many years of ad-hoc and non-consistent measures, now the problem is finally well formulated and some useful and very user-friendly solutions have been proposed. These new measures of risk should be of great interest for investors, financial institutions as well as for regulators.

Under the editorship of Professor Giorgio Szego of the University of Rome "La Sapienza", this book is a collection of the revised and updated papers from prestigious international specialists who are leaders in their field, amongst whom is Robert Engle, a newly-announced Nobel prize-winner in finance. These authors bring a broad perspective across a wide selection of topics, ranging from the critique of some currently used methods, like Value at Risk, to the presentation of some correct risk measures and of some advanced application

The book provides a detailed and up-to-date reference for researchers within academia, and risk managers or financial engineers.

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“…excellent..provides detailed and up-to-date reference material…written by someone at the top of his field” (Accounting Technician, Sep 2004)

From the Back Cover

The last five years have witnessed a great momentum in the research into measures of financial risk. After many years of ad-hoc and non-consistent measures, now the problem is finally well formulated and some useful and very user-friendly solutions have been proposed. These new measures of risk should be of great interest for investors, financial institutions as well as for regulators. 

Under the editorship of Professor Giorgio Szego of the University of Rome "La Sapienza", this book is a collection of the revised and updated papers from prestigious international specialists who are leaders in their field, amongst whom is Robert Engle, a newly-announced Nobel prize-winner in finance. These authors bring a broad perspective across a wide selection of topics, ranging from the critique of some currently used methods, like Value at Risk, to the presentation of some correct risk measures and of some advanced application

The book provides a detailed and up-to-date reference for researchers within academia, and risk managers or financial engineers.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 512 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (April 26, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0470861541
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470861547
  • Product Dimensions: 6.9 x 1.3 x 10 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,245,405 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good discussions of current alternatives to risk management, July 30, 2010
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This review is from: Risk Measures for the 21st Century (The Wiley Finance Series) (Hardcover)
Risk measures have been long been important, especially from a regulatory standpoint, but this importance has been magnified by the current `financial crisis' and the need for more robust measures of risk over and above what has been currently been in place by banks and other financial institutions. Value-At-Risk, or VAR, has been widely used in the banking industry, due in part to the Basel-II Accords and its ease in implementation. VAR of course has been criticized vociferously both by academics and practitioners alike, but alternatives to VAR, even though they seem plausible on paper, at times are difficult to implement and interpret. It remains to be seen how the relaxation of Basel requirements will affect risk management and capital requirements in the major banks of the world. One thing is clear and that is that risk management will employ even more mathematically sophisticated risk measures in the years ahead, due to the regulatory environment and hyper-technological developments. This book gives a good introduction of what to expect and what has been done in research and development in finding alternative risk measures.

Financial modelers have also been criticized recently for their use of `copula functions'. Indeed, one article in the press described copulas as a "recipe for disaster" and their use is held to be responsible for the "killing of Wall street." To counter these claims, a few articles and books have appeared in recent months, and this book contains an article that addresses the use of copulas in finance. The authors introduce copulas as a method for dealing with the aggregation of individual risks that goes beyond the Gaussian assumption.

If one begins with a vector of uniform random variables, a copula is their joint distribution, and is effectively a function that can be written as a product if the variables are independent. It also must satisfy certain properties dealing with how it increases and how it operators on the boundary of an n-dimensional hypercube. The authors believe that copulas are useful in finance in that they can quantify risk in terms of individual risk variables and the dependences between them without having to have an explicit characterization of the individual risks.

With all the press about stress testing of banks and the failure of (Gaussian) VAR models in risk management, the author detail how to use copulas in these two areas. A non-Gaussian VAR model is constructed using two different choices of copula functions and compared with the historical Gaussian VAR. The latter is show to underestimate the risk for a confidence level greater than 95%. This situation is the "tail" risk of the Gaussian assumption that has been widely discussed in the financial press in the last couple of years.

Bank stress testing, especially for European banks, is of great interest at the present time and the authors. As the name implies, stress testing deals with how resilient a bank's portfolio is to extreme shocks of the type that might be "rare" or "extreme". Regulatory requirements force the world's major banks to do this (the famous `Basel Accords'). The authors construct `extreme value' copulas to build multivariate stress scenarios. An elementary example for the bivariate case is given that deals with the DowJones and the French CAC40 risk factors. It would have been helpful if the authors would have included at least one more example in order to compare differences.

The authors also present a toy model for pricing basket (equity) derivatives that illustrates the issues in modeling the dependences in risk factors in this case. An explicit real-world example would have been helpful here, or a reference to such an example, in order that readers can see what can go wrong in a realistic scenario from an investment house or hedge fund. They do the same for credit derivatives in another section, wherein they give an interesting graph that illustrates the dependence of the loss distribution and VAR on the choice of copula function. One part of this discussion which may be new to some readers is the notion of `derivatives at risk', which the author write in terms of a conditional expectation and explain how to estimate it with Monte Carlo simulation. Readers will need to know what a `risk-neutral' probability measure to follow the discussion.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Since its birth as an independent branch of social sciences, finance has witnessed three major revolutions: mean-variance, 1952-56 continuous-time models, 1969-73 risk measures, 1997- Markowitz (1952, 1959) proposed to measure risk associated with the return of each investment by means of the deviation from the mean of the return distribution i.e., the variance, and, in the case of a combination (portfolio) of assets, to gauge the risk level via the covariance between all pairs of investments, i.e.: Cov[X, Y] = E[X, Y] - E[X]E[Y], where X and Y are random returns. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
return management approach, safety risk measures, dynamic risk measure, international capital regulation, spectral risk measures, coherent risk measures, hank portfolio, optimal hedging portfolios, marginal risk contributions, market risk regulations, bootstrap average, risk spectra, granularity adjustment, general loss distributions, conditional volatility models, first stochastic dominance, risk return management, stress test measures, copula framework, most risk models, elliptical world, primitive assets, quantile residuals, estimation horizons, copula families
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Monte Carlo, Journal of Banking, New York, Basel Committee, Coherent Representations of Subjective Risk-Aversion, John Wiley, Banking Supervision, Century Table, Rosazza Gianin, Journal of Finance, Financial Applications of Copula Functions, Mathematical Finance, Cambridge University Press, Derivative Portfolio Hedging Based, Comparison of Value-at-Risk Models, Gamma Gamma, Journal of Business, Journal of Portfolio Management, Management Science, Upgrading Value-at-Risk, Hang Seng, University of Florida, Global Research, Journal of Empirical Finance, Lecture Notes
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