What We Know, Don’t Know and Can’t Know About Bank Risk: A View from the Trenches

This is from the Fed:

This paper seeks to put forward a framework, from the perspective of practitioners and policymakers, for how the known, unknown, and unknowable vary by risk type within banking. We define total bank risk in terms of earnings volatility, which can be broken down into five major classes of risk: market, credit, asset/liability, operational, and business risks. For our purposes, risk is “known” (K) if it can be enumerated, in the sense of being identified, and quantified; it is “unknown” (u) if the set of risks can be identified and enumerated but not meaningfully quantified; and it is “unknowable” (U) if the existence of the risk or set of risks is not predictable ex ante, let alone quantifiable. Based on these definitions, we position the five sources of bank risk within the K, u, U space based on evidence from industry practice and suggest that K decreases, and u and U increase, along a spectrum from market risk to credit risk, asset/liability risk, operational risk, and business risk. Using bank-level data we attempt to quantify or “size” both total bank risk and the contribution from each risk type based on a large sample of earnings volatility data for US bank holding companies over the 1986-2005 period. We find that a) total earnings volatility is protected by minimum regulatory capital requirements at implied credit rating levels ranging from about A- to BBB, depending on the sample; b) when allocating among the different risk types, market risk accounts for only about 5%, credit for almost half, structural interest rate risk for about 18%, and non-financial risks, including both operational and business risk, for about 30% of total risk; c) the diversification benefit, i.e. the difference between the whole and the sum of the parts, is about one third.
Not surprisingly, large banks also seem to experience fewer extreme adverse outcomes.


What We Know, Don’t Know and Can’t Know About Bank Risk: A View from the Trenches

Posted by jck at 4:04 pm EST on May 5th, 2008 |

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

  • Blogs

    • Paul Krugman

    • Obama's speech
    • I just read the text. It’s a solid attack on Republican economic management, hitting many of the same themes as the Clintons did this week (and reminiscent of Clinton’s 1992 speech — which is high praise.) And is it possible ...

    • Portfolio.com: Market Movers

    • Joe Nocera, Blogger
    • This is why newspapers should want all their columnists to blog. Joe Nocera: Although Lehman has been the number one rated equity research shop (again, according to Institutional Investor), that just shows how flawed such ratings are. Everybody on Wall ...

    • Le blog d'éconoclaste

    • La pauvreté mondiale augmente de 40% en une journée
    • Rassurez-vous : c'est uniquement parce que la Banque Mondiale a modifié son calcul du seuil de pauvreté mondial, qui passe de 1 dollar par jour et par personne, aux prix de 1993, à 1,25 dollar par jour et par personne, aux ...

    • Abnormal Returns

    • Friday links: accuracy and usefulness
    • Fannie and Freddie employees have taken a hit in the value of their ESOP accounts.  (NYTimes.com) Without some plausible reason it is difficult to believe September is a particularly bad month for the stock market.  (Marketwatch.com) Gold seasonality ...

    • Going Private

    • The Spiral - Part V - The Board
    • Part V of the Going Private miniseries "The Spiral." The Board of Directors is increasingly perturbed with the Chairman and CEO, but their loyalties are difficult to shed. Self-interest also prevents any meaningful change. Meanwhile, the Chairman and CEO presents ...

    • Stumbling and Mumbling

    • The Friday questions
    • In what might become a regular feature, here are some unrelated questions arising this week. Feel free to help me out:1. The government wants children to learn about the slave trade. But in 18th century England, how much different were...

    • FT Alphaville

    • The Weekender
    • On FT Alphaville this week, - Charts du Jaws. - Temasek is famished. - From granite to mound. - Hello, Wells Fargo? - Save our beer kegs, drain covers and road signs. - Save our economy. - The great unwind. ...

    • The Aleph Blog

    • Accounting for Quality: the Quality of Accounting
    • Accounting is esoteric.  :(  I say this as one who has never taken an accounting course in his life, but has written papers on accounting standards, and has had to implement them in the life insurance industry, which is possibly ...

contact

jck [at]

aleablog [dot] com


© 2008 Alea | Powered by Wordpress


E-mail It