Counterparty credit risk [[electronic resource] ] : the new challenge for global financial markets / / Jon Gregory |
Autore | Gregory Jon, Ph. D. |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Chichester, U.K., : Wiley, c2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (450 p.) |
Disciplina | 332.6457 |
Collana | Wiley finance |
Soggetto topico |
Derivative securities - Mathematical models
Risk management |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-283-23951-5
9786613239518 0-470-97272-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Counterparty Credit Risk: The New Challenge for Global Financial Markets; Contents; Acknowledgements; List of Spreadsheets; List of Abbreviations; Introduction; 1 Setting the Scene; 1.1 Financial risk management; 1.1.1 Market risk; 1.1.2 Liquidity risk; 1.1.3 Operational risk; 1.1.4 Credit risk; 1.1.5 Value-at-risk; 1.1.6 Disadvantages of value-at-risk; 1.2 The failure of models; 1.2.1 Why models?; 1.2.2 Good model, bad model; 1.3 The derivatives market; 1.3.1 What is a derivative?; 1.3.2 Market structure; 1.4 Risks of derivatives; 1.4.1 Too big to fail; 1.4.2 Systemic risk
1.4.3 Compensation culture 1.4.4 Credit derivatives; 1.5 Counterparty risk in context; 1.5.1 What is counterparty risk?; 1.5.2 Mitigation of counterparty risk; 1.5.3 Counterparty risk and integration of risk types; 1.5.4 Counterparty risk and today's derivatives market; 2 Defining Counterparty Credit Risk; 2.1 Introducing counterparty risk; 2.1.1 Origins of counterparty risk; 2.1.2 Repos; 2.1.3 Exchange-traded derivatives; 2.1.4 OTC derivatives; 2.1.5 Counterparty risk; 2.1.6 Counterparty risk versus lending risk; 2.1.7 Mitigating counterparty risk; 2.1.8 Counterparty risk players 2.2 Components and terminology 2.2.1 Credit exposure; 2.2.2 Default probability and credit migration; 2.2.3 Recovery; 2.2.4 Mark-to-market; 2.2.5 Replacement cost; 2.2.6 Exposure; 2.2.7 Exposure as a short option position; 2.2.8 Potential future exposure (PFE); 2.3 Controlling counterparty credit risk; 2.3.1 Trading with high-quality counterparties; 2.3.2 Cross-product netting; 2.3.3 Close-out; 2.3.4 Collateralisation; 2.3.5 Walkaway features; 2.3.6 Monolines; 2.3.7 Diversification of counterparty risk; 2.3.8 Exchanges and centralised clearing houses; 2.4 Quantifying counterparty risk 2.4.1 Credit lines 2.4.2 Pricing counterparty risk; 2.4.3 Hedging counterparty risk; 2.4.4 Capital requirements and counterparty risk; 2.5 Metrics for credit exposure; 2.5.1 Expected MtM; 2.5.2 Expected exposure; 2.5.3 Potential future exposure; 2.5.4 EE and PFE for a normal distribution; 2.5.5 Overview of exposure metrics; 2.5.6 Expected positive exposure; 2.5.7 Effective EPE; 2.5.8 Maximum PFE; 2.6 Summary; Appendix 2.A Characterising exposure for a normal distribution; 3 Mitigating Counterparty Credit Risk; 3.1 Introduction; 3.1.1 Two-way or one-way agreements; 3.1.2 Standardisation 3.2 Default-remote entities 3.2.1 High-quality counterparties; 3.2.2 Special purpose vehicles; 3.2.3 Central counterparties; 3.3 Termination and walkaway features; 3.3.1 Termination events; 3.3.2 Additional termination events; 3.3.3 Walkaway features; 3.4 Netting and close-out; 3.4.1 Close-out; 3.4.2 Payment and close-out netting; 3.4.3 The need for close-out netting; 3.4.4 The birth of netting; 3.4.5 Netting agreements; 3.4.6 The ISDA Master Agreement; 3.4.7 Product coverage; 3.4.8 Netting and exposure; 3.4.9 Advantages and disadvantages of netting; 3.4.10 Multilateral netting 3.5 Netting and exposure |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910456723903321 |
Gregory Jon, Ph. D. | ||
Chichester, U.K., : Wiley, c2010 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Counterparty credit risk [[electronic resource] ] : the new challenge for global financial markets / / Jon Gregory |
Autore | Gregory Jon, Ph. D. |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Chichester, U.K., : Wiley, c2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (450 p.) |
Disciplina | 332.6457 |
Collana | Wiley finance |
Soggetto topico |
Derivative securities - Mathematical models
Risk management |
ISBN |
1-283-23951-5
9786613239518 0-470-97272-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Counterparty Credit Risk: The New Challenge for Global Financial Markets; Contents; Acknowledgements; List of Spreadsheets; List of Abbreviations; Introduction; 1 Setting the Scene; 1.1 Financial risk management; 1.1.1 Market risk; 1.1.2 Liquidity risk; 1.1.3 Operational risk; 1.1.4 Credit risk; 1.1.5 Value-at-risk; 1.1.6 Disadvantages of value-at-risk; 1.2 The failure of models; 1.2.1 Why models?; 1.2.2 Good model, bad model; 1.3 The derivatives market; 1.3.1 What is a derivative?; 1.3.2 Market structure; 1.4 Risks of derivatives; 1.4.1 Too big to fail; 1.4.2 Systemic risk
1.4.3 Compensation culture 1.4.4 Credit derivatives; 1.5 Counterparty risk in context; 1.5.1 What is counterparty risk?; 1.5.2 Mitigation of counterparty risk; 1.5.3 Counterparty risk and integration of risk types; 1.5.4 Counterparty risk and today's derivatives market; 2 Defining Counterparty Credit Risk; 2.1 Introducing counterparty risk; 2.1.1 Origins of counterparty risk; 2.1.2 Repos; 2.1.3 Exchange-traded derivatives; 2.1.4 OTC derivatives; 2.1.5 Counterparty risk; 2.1.6 Counterparty risk versus lending risk; 2.1.7 Mitigating counterparty risk; 2.1.8 Counterparty risk players 2.2 Components and terminology 2.2.1 Credit exposure; 2.2.2 Default probability and credit migration; 2.2.3 Recovery; 2.2.4 Mark-to-market; 2.2.5 Replacement cost; 2.2.6 Exposure; 2.2.7 Exposure as a short option position; 2.2.8 Potential future exposure (PFE); 2.3 Controlling counterparty credit risk; 2.3.1 Trading with high-quality counterparties; 2.3.2 Cross-product netting; 2.3.3 Close-out; 2.3.4 Collateralisation; 2.3.5 Walkaway features; 2.3.6 Monolines; 2.3.7 Diversification of counterparty risk; 2.3.8 Exchanges and centralised clearing houses; 2.4 Quantifying counterparty risk 2.4.1 Credit lines 2.4.2 Pricing counterparty risk; 2.4.3 Hedging counterparty risk; 2.4.4 Capital requirements and counterparty risk; 2.5 Metrics for credit exposure; 2.5.1 Expected MtM; 2.5.2 Expected exposure; 2.5.3 Potential future exposure; 2.5.4 EE and PFE for a normal distribution; 2.5.5 Overview of exposure metrics; 2.5.6 Expected positive exposure; 2.5.7 Effective EPE; 2.5.8 Maximum PFE; 2.6 Summary; Appendix 2.A Characterising exposure for a normal distribution; 3 Mitigating Counterparty Credit Risk; 3.1 Introduction; 3.1.1 Two-way or one-way agreements; 3.1.2 Standardisation 3.2 Default-remote entities 3.2.1 High-quality counterparties; 3.2.2 Special purpose vehicles; 3.2.3 Central counterparties; 3.3 Termination and walkaway features; 3.3.1 Termination events; 3.3.2 Additional termination events; 3.3.3 Walkaway features; 3.4 Netting and close-out; 3.4.1 Close-out; 3.4.2 Payment and close-out netting; 3.4.3 The need for close-out netting; 3.4.4 The birth of netting; 3.4.5 Netting agreements; 3.4.6 The ISDA Master Agreement; 3.4.7 Product coverage; 3.4.8 Netting and exposure; 3.4.9 Advantages and disadvantages of netting; 3.4.10 Multilateral netting 3.5 Netting and exposure |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910781765103321 |
Gregory Jon, Ph. D. | ||
Chichester, U.K., : Wiley, c2010 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Counterparty credit risk : the new challenge for global financial markets / / Jon Gregory |
Autore | Gregory Jon, Ph. D. |
Edizione | [1st edition] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Chichester, U.K., : Wiley, c2010 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (450 p.) |
Disciplina | 332.6457 |
Collana | Wiley finance |
Soggetto topico |
Derivative securities - Mathematical models
Risk management |
ISBN |
1-283-23951-5
9786613239518 0-470-97272-6 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Counterparty Credit Risk: The New Challenge for Global Financial Markets; Contents; Acknowledgements; List of Spreadsheets; List of Abbreviations; Introduction; 1 Setting the Scene; 1.1 Financial risk management; 1.1.1 Market risk; 1.1.2 Liquidity risk; 1.1.3 Operational risk; 1.1.4 Credit risk; 1.1.5 Value-at-risk; 1.1.6 Disadvantages of value-at-risk; 1.2 The failure of models; 1.2.1 Why models?; 1.2.2 Good model, bad model; 1.3 The derivatives market; 1.3.1 What is a derivative?; 1.3.2 Market structure; 1.4 Risks of derivatives; 1.4.1 Too big to fail; 1.4.2 Systemic risk
1.4.3 Compensation culture 1.4.4 Credit derivatives; 1.5 Counterparty risk in context; 1.5.1 What is counterparty risk?; 1.5.2 Mitigation of counterparty risk; 1.5.3 Counterparty risk and integration of risk types; 1.5.4 Counterparty risk and today's derivatives market; 2 Defining Counterparty Credit Risk; 2.1 Introducing counterparty risk; 2.1.1 Origins of counterparty risk; 2.1.2 Repos; 2.1.3 Exchange-traded derivatives; 2.1.4 OTC derivatives; 2.1.5 Counterparty risk; 2.1.6 Counterparty risk versus lending risk; 2.1.7 Mitigating counterparty risk; 2.1.8 Counterparty risk players 2.2 Components and terminology 2.2.1 Credit exposure; 2.2.2 Default probability and credit migration; 2.2.3 Recovery; 2.2.4 Mark-to-market; 2.2.5 Replacement cost; 2.2.6 Exposure; 2.2.7 Exposure as a short option position; 2.2.8 Potential future exposure (PFE); 2.3 Controlling counterparty credit risk; 2.3.1 Trading with high-quality counterparties; 2.3.2 Cross-product netting; 2.3.3 Close-out; 2.3.4 Collateralisation; 2.3.5 Walkaway features; 2.3.6 Monolines; 2.3.7 Diversification of counterparty risk; 2.3.8 Exchanges and centralised clearing houses; 2.4 Quantifying counterparty risk 2.4.1 Credit lines 2.4.2 Pricing counterparty risk; 2.4.3 Hedging counterparty risk; 2.4.4 Capital requirements and counterparty risk; 2.5 Metrics for credit exposure; 2.5.1 Expected MtM; 2.5.2 Expected exposure; 2.5.3 Potential future exposure; 2.5.4 EE and PFE for a normal distribution; 2.5.5 Overview of exposure metrics; 2.5.6 Expected positive exposure; 2.5.7 Effective EPE; 2.5.8 Maximum PFE; 2.6 Summary; Appendix 2.A Characterising exposure for a normal distribution; 3 Mitigating Counterparty Credit Risk; 3.1 Introduction; 3.1.1 Two-way or one-way agreements; 3.1.2 Standardisation 3.2 Default-remote entities 3.2.1 High-quality counterparties; 3.2.2 Special purpose vehicles; 3.2.3 Central counterparties; 3.3 Termination and walkaway features; 3.3.1 Termination events; 3.3.2 Additional termination events; 3.3.3 Walkaway features; 3.4 Netting and close-out; 3.4.1 Close-out; 3.4.2 Payment and close-out netting; 3.4.3 The need for close-out netting; 3.4.4 The birth of netting; 3.4.5 Netting agreements; 3.4.6 The ISDA Master Agreement; 3.4.7 Product coverage; 3.4.8 Netting and exposure; 3.4.9 Advantages and disadvantages of netting; 3.4.10 Multilateral netting 3.5 Netting and exposure |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910824278403321 |
Gregory Jon, Ph. D. | ||
Chichester, U.K., : Wiley, c2010 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Counterparty credit risk and credit value adjustment [[electronic resource] ] : a continuing challenge for global financial markets / / Jon Gregory |
Autore | Gregory Jon, Ph. D. |
Edizione | [2nd ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hoboken, NJ, : Wiley, 2012 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (481 p.) |
Disciplina | 332.64/57 |
Altri autori (Persone) | GregoryJon, Ph. D. |
Collana | The Wiley Finance Series |
Soggetto topico |
Derivative securities - Mathematical models
Risk management |
ISBN |
1-118-67363-8
1-283-60383-7 9786613916280 1-118-31665-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Counterparty Credit Risk and Credit Value Adjustment: A Continuing Challenge for Global Financial Markets; Contents; Acknowledgements; List of Spreadsheets; List of Appendices; SECTION I: INTRODUCTION; 1 Introduction; 2 Background; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Financial risk; 2.2.1 Market risk; 2.2.2 Credit risk; 2.2.3 Liquidity risk; 2.2.4 Operational risk; 2.2.5 Integration of risk types; 2.3 Value-at-Risk; 2.3.1 Definition; 2.3.2 The dangers of VAR; 2.3.3 Models; 2.3.4 Correlation and dependency; 2.4 The derivatives market; 2.4.1 Uses of derivatives; 2.4.2 Exchange-traded and OTC derivatives
2.4.3 Risks of derivatives2.4.4 Too big to fail and systemic risk; 2.4.5 Credit derivatives; 2.5 Counterparty risk in context; 2.5.1 The rise of counterparty risk; 2.5.2 Counterparty risk and CVA; 2.5.3 Mitigating counterparty risk; 2.5.4 Counterparty risk and central clearing; 2.6 Summary; 3 Defining Counterparty Credit Risk; 3.1 Introducing counterparty credit risk; 3.1.1 Counterparty risk versus lending risk; 3.1.2 Settlement and pre-settlement risk; 3.1.3 Exchange-traded derivatives; 3.1.4 OTC-traded derivatives; 3.1.5 Repos and securities lending; 3.1.6 Mitigating counterparty risk 3.1.7 Counterparty risk players3.2 Components and terminology; 3.2.1 Credit exposure; 3.2.2 Default probability, credit migration and credit spreads; 3.2.3 Recovery and loss given default; 3.2.4 Mark-to-market and replacement cost; 3.2.5 Mitigating counterparty risk; 3.3 Control and quantification; 3.3.1 Credit limits; 3.3.2 Credit value adjustment; 3.3.3 CVA or credit limits?; 3.3.4 What does CVA represent?; 3.3.5 Hedging counterparty risk; 3.3.6 Portfolio counterparty risk; 3.4 Summary; SECTION II: MITIGATION OF COUNTERPARTY CREDIT RISK 4 Netting, Compression, Resets and Termination Features4.1 Introduction; 4.1.1 The origins of counterparty risk; 4.1.2 The ISDA master agreement; 4.2 Netting; 4.2.1 Payment netting; 4.2.2 The need for closeout netting; 4.2.3 Closeout netting; 4.2.4 Netting sets and subadditivity; 4.2.5 The impact of netting; 4.2.6 Product coverage; 4.3 Termination features and trade compression; 4.3.1 Reset agreements; 4.3.2 Additional termination events; 4.3.3 Walkaway features; 4.3.4 Trade compression and multilateral netting; 4.4 Conclusion; 5 Collateral; 5.1 Introduction; 5.1.1 Rationale for collateral 5.1.2 Analogy with mortgages5.1.3 The basics of collateralisation; 5.1.4 Collateral usage; 5.1.5 The credit support annex; 5.1.6 Impact of collateral; 5.2 Collateral terms; 5.2.1 Valuation agent; 5.2.2 Types of collateral; 5.2.3 Coverage of collateralisation; 5.2.4 Disputes and reconciliations; 5.2.5 Margin call frequency; 5.2.6 Haircuts; 5.2.7 Coupons and interest payments; 5.2.8 Substitution, funding costs and rehypothecation; 5.3 Defining the amount of collateral; 5.3.1 Types of CSA; 5.3.2 Linkage of collateral parameters to credit quality; 5.3.3 Threshold; 5.3.4 Independent amount 5.3.5 Minimum transfer amount and rounding |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910141391303321 |
Gregory Jon, Ph. D. | ||
Hoboken, NJ, : Wiley, 2012 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
Counterparty credit risk and credit value adjustment : a continuing challenge for global financial markets / / Jon Gregory |
Autore | Gregory Jon, Ph. D. |
Edizione | [2nd ed.] |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Hoboken, NJ, : Wiley, 2012 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (481 p.) |
Disciplina | 332.64/57 |
Altri autori (Persone) | GregoryJon, Ph. D. |
Collana | The Wiley Finance Series |
Soggetto topico |
Derivative securities - Mathematical models
Risk management |
ISBN |
1-118-67363-8
1-283-60383-7 9786613916280 1-118-31665-7 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
Counterparty Credit Risk and Credit Value Adjustment: A Continuing Challenge for Global Financial Markets; Contents; Acknowledgements; List of Spreadsheets; List of Appendices; SECTION I: INTRODUCTION; 1 Introduction; 2 Background; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Financial risk; 2.2.1 Market risk; 2.2.2 Credit risk; 2.2.3 Liquidity risk; 2.2.4 Operational risk; 2.2.5 Integration of risk types; 2.3 Value-at-Risk; 2.3.1 Definition; 2.3.2 The dangers of VAR; 2.3.3 Models; 2.3.4 Correlation and dependency; 2.4 The derivatives market; 2.4.1 Uses of derivatives; 2.4.2 Exchange-traded and OTC derivatives
2.4.3 Risks of derivatives2.4.4 Too big to fail and systemic risk; 2.4.5 Credit derivatives; 2.5 Counterparty risk in context; 2.5.1 The rise of counterparty risk; 2.5.2 Counterparty risk and CVA; 2.5.3 Mitigating counterparty risk; 2.5.4 Counterparty risk and central clearing; 2.6 Summary; 3 Defining Counterparty Credit Risk; 3.1 Introducing counterparty credit risk; 3.1.1 Counterparty risk versus lending risk; 3.1.2 Settlement and pre-settlement risk; 3.1.3 Exchange-traded derivatives; 3.1.4 OTC-traded derivatives; 3.1.5 Repos and securities lending; 3.1.6 Mitigating counterparty risk 3.1.7 Counterparty risk players3.2 Components and terminology; 3.2.1 Credit exposure; 3.2.2 Default probability, credit migration and credit spreads; 3.2.3 Recovery and loss given default; 3.2.4 Mark-to-market and replacement cost; 3.2.5 Mitigating counterparty risk; 3.3 Control and quantification; 3.3.1 Credit limits; 3.3.2 Credit value adjustment; 3.3.3 CVA or credit limits?; 3.3.4 What does CVA represent?; 3.3.5 Hedging counterparty risk; 3.3.6 Portfolio counterparty risk; 3.4 Summary; SECTION II: MITIGATION OF COUNTERPARTY CREDIT RISK 4 Netting, Compression, Resets and Termination Features4.1 Introduction; 4.1.1 The origins of counterparty risk; 4.1.2 The ISDA master agreement; 4.2 Netting; 4.2.1 Payment netting; 4.2.2 The need for closeout netting; 4.2.3 Closeout netting; 4.2.4 Netting sets and subadditivity; 4.2.5 The impact of netting; 4.2.6 Product coverage; 4.3 Termination features and trade compression; 4.3.1 Reset agreements; 4.3.2 Additional termination events; 4.3.3 Walkaway features; 4.3.4 Trade compression and multilateral netting; 4.4 Conclusion; 5 Collateral; 5.1 Introduction; 5.1.1 Rationale for collateral 5.1.2 Analogy with mortgages5.1.3 The basics of collateralisation; 5.1.4 Collateral usage; 5.1.5 The credit support annex; 5.1.6 Impact of collateral; 5.2 Collateral terms; 5.2.1 Valuation agent; 5.2.2 Types of collateral; 5.2.3 Coverage of collateralisation; 5.2.4 Disputes and reconciliations; 5.2.5 Margin call frequency; 5.2.6 Haircuts; 5.2.7 Coupons and interest payments; 5.2.8 Substitution, funding costs and rehypothecation; 5.3 Defining the amount of collateral; 5.3.1 Types of CSA; 5.3.2 Linkage of collateral parameters to credit quality; 5.3.3 Threshold; 5.3.4 Independent amount 5.3.5 Minimum transfer amount and rounding |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910828065203321 |
Gregory Jon, Ph. D. | ||
Hoboken, NJ, : Wiley, 2012 | ||
Materiale a stampa | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|