1 / 43

Financial Risk Management

Financial Risk Management. SIM/NYU The Job of the CFO. Prof. Ian Giddy New York University. Risk Management is a Process. Corporate Risk Management. Define. Measure. Manage. Monitor. Financial Risk Management. Why does it matter? Why and when should we hedge?

Télécharger la présentation

Financial Risk Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Financial Risk Management SIM/NYU The Job of the CFO Prof. Ian Giddy New York University

  2. Risk Management is a Process Corporate Risk Management Define Measure Manage Monitor

  3. Financial Risk Management • Why does it matter? • Why and when should we hedge? • What should we hedge? How should we gauge exposure? • Financial risk management must be tied to the company’s business

  4. The Case For Hedging • Company has special information • Company has special market access • Secure cash for investment opportunities • Reduce potential costs of financial distress, increase debt capacity, and reduce expected taxes Since currency matching reduces the probability of financial distress, it allows the firm to have greater leverage and therefore a greater tax shield.

  5. Optimal Capital Structure VALUE OF THE FIRM HEDGING CAN REDUCE COSTS OF FINANCIAL DISTRESS ALL-EQUITY VALUE DEBT RATIO

  6. Hedging, Valuation, Taxes and Financial Distress

  7. When Should Firms Hedge? Business risk Financial risk

  8. Which Firms Should Hedge? Characteristics of firms for which financial stress is especially costly: • Firms with: • Products that require after-sale servicing • Products whose quality is difficult to determine in advance • Products with high switching costs • Products that rely on third-party servicing • And firms that have: • High-growth opportunities • Intangible assets like firm-specific human capital • Large excess tax deductions

  9. What Exposure Should Firms Hedge? • Currency risk • Transactions • Translation exposure • Economic exposure • Interest Rate Risk • Commodity Price Risk

  10. Measuring Market Exposure • Defining corporate exposure: “How will my company’s value be affected by market price fluctuations?” • Types of exposure • Transactions • Balance sheet/portfolio • Economic • A risk management framework

  11. Don’t measure risk No linkage of risk to value No effort to anticipate Lack of business risk policy Fragmented effort Narrow focus Poor risk communications Lack of an integrated risk assessment framework How Effective is My Company’s Risk Management? Warning Signs:

  12. Formalize Risk Management Policy and Control Framework • Develop an outline of a policy statement, or recommend improvements to existing document • Benchmark controls versus best practice using the Group of Thirty Recommendations, Treasury Management Association Guidelines, or accumulated knowledge of appropriate practices • Assess centralization issues related to financial risk management and treasury design Corporate Risk Management Define Measure Manage Monitor

  13. Identification and Definition of Financial Exposures Goal: To identify significant financial risk exposures and prioritize them in a manner consistent with management's desired risk profile. Translation Exposure, Transaction Exposure, and Economic Exposure Absolute Rate Risk, Convexity, Basis or Correlation Risk Price Risk, Basis or Correlation Risk • Short-term liquidity portfolio • Investment portfolio • Capital markets borrowing • Leasing portfolio • Long-term versus short-term exposure • Intracompany versus third party exposure • Cross currency exposure • Competitive exposures • Procurement • Inventory • Sales elasticity Commodity Interest Rate Currency

  14. Market Risks: Definitions Three Views of Market Price Risk: • Transactions • Balance Sheet/Portfolio • Economic risk.

  15. Market Risks: Definitions Three Views of Market Price Risk: • Transactions • Balance Sheet/Portfolio • Economic risk. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure

  16. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure Transactions Exposure • Transactions exposure results from particular transactions such as an export where a known cash flow in a given currency will take place at a certain date • Example: If Nokia invoices a NTT of Japan in Japanese yen for a celphone shipment then the firm has Japanese yen exposure and can hedge this by borrowing yen. • This kind of exposure is readily hedgable using forwards, futures or debt

  17. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure But Transactions Exposure Can be Misleading... • Austin Computer purchases notebook computers in Taiwan for sale in the US. • Austin must pay in NT$. • Should it hedge its anticipated payments for 1996?

  18. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure Austin Computer NT$

  19. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure Interest Rate Risk:Portfolio • Portfolio risk: interest rate fluctuations can affect the value of a bond investment portfolio • Bond price fluctuations will affect the balance sheet • Can be hedged, using duration as a risk/sensitivity measurement tool • Can be hedged with futures, bond options, and swaps.

  20. Assets (each $10m): 1-year E$ deposit 5-year, 6% T-note D=4.6 10-year Strip Pension liabilities: $10m 3 years $10m 5 years $10m 7 years Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure Pepsico Pension • What is Pepsico pension fund’s risk? • Duration of the assets (+ve) • Duration of the liabilities (-ve) • Net duration is the risk to be hedged!

  21. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure SANTOSBANK INSTRUMENT POSITIONS 30 day ($1,250,000) 90 day ($100,000) 180 day $450,000 1 yr $120,000 2 yr $120,000 3 yr $120,000 4 yr $1,120,000 5 yr $0 7 yr $0 9 yr $0 10 yr ($420,000) 15 yr $0 NET $160,000 TOTAL $3,700,000 Value at Risk: SantosBank Asset and liability positions for a Brazilian bank’s New York branch. What risk does it face?

  22. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure SANTOSBANK INSTRUMENT POSITIONS ($1,250,000) 30 day ($100,000) 90 day $450,000 180 day $120,000 1 yr $120,000 2 yr $120,000 3 yr $1,120,000 4 yr $0 5 yr $0 7 yr $0 9 yr ($420,000) 10 yr $0 15 yr NET $160,000 TOTAL $3,700,000 BIS: Minimize Value at Risk + = Value-at-Risk Mean

  23. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure Market Price Risk: Economic • Economic risk arises from the real business risk of the company, insofar as it is tied to market interest rates, FX, commodity prices • It affects the shareholder value, but may be difficult to quantify • Hedging may require tailored solutions

  24. Inmet Mining Corp. • In 1994 Canadian mining company Inmet bought 48% of Bougrine, a lead & zinc mine in Tunisia. Inmet had to borrow $33 million at a floating rate. Should it hedge its cost of funds? • Answer: Business exposure is to lead & zinc prices (mine shutdown in Oct 96 because of low zinc prices) • Hedge with digital option linking cost of funds to lead & zinc prices

  25. Transactions Exposure Portfolio Exposure Economic Exposure Market Price Risks: Summary Three Views of Market Price Risk: • Transactions - lock in forward rate • Portfolios • Avoid duration mismatching • Minimize Value at Risk • Economic risk - business sensitivity to market prices.

  26. “Most Important” Objective InUsing Derivatives To Hedge Market Value of the Firm 8% Volatility in Cashflow Volatility in Earnings 49% 42% CIBC Wood Gundy/Wharton 1995 End-User Survey “Most Important” Objective In Using Derivatives To Hedge Balance Sheet Accounts 1%

  27. Next Step: Analyze Current Exposure Measurement Techniques Precision of the data Risk Information Sources: Time horizon of the projections • Current trade flow data • Portfolio system reports • Accounting information • Budgeted trade flow data • Pricing practices Frequency of reporting Quantification Adequacy

  28. Portfolio system reports Accounting information Budgeted trade flow data Corporate Exposure Information Sources Current trade flow data Exposure Database Hard Soft Economic exposure estimates

  29. Exposure Database: Example Exposure Database

  30. From Data to Analysis Exposure Database Exposure Measurement System

  31. Portfolio Risk Simulation  Gov't Bonds Zero Cashflow  RiskMetricsª  USD Base. Vols. & correls. as of May 04, 1995.    AUD  BEF  CAD  DKK  FFR  DEM  ITL  JPY  NLG  ESB  SEK  CHF  GBP XEU  USD Total  1 Mo   15 22  37  3 Mo   -200  20 -30   160 - 50  6 Mo  25   -5 20  12 Mo   -105 - 105  2 Yr  0  3 Yr  0  4 Yr  0  5 Yr  0   7 Yr  0  9 Yr  0 ($000)  10 Yr  0  15 Yr  0 RISK  20 Yr  0  30 Yr  0 Equity  0   Implied   - 196.1   59 22 -29   54 -145 FX  Spot  23  23    Net   - 196.1   82 22 -29  -122 Int.   740   502   262 5 139  400   Eq.  8516  Fx   5,048   4265 1383 1820  divers.   -200   -347 -6 -83  -451  8805  Net   5,350   4181 1383 1876  400 A Management-Friendly Report • An example is FourFifteen™, named after J.P. Morgan's market risk report produced at 4:15 p.m. each day. • The "4:15 Report," a single sheet of paper, summarizes the Daily Earnings at Risk for J.P. Morgan worldwide.

  32. Exposure Report: Example

  33. Distribution of market moves and portfolio values • Includes market correlations • Reprice portfolio • Aggregate risk measures within confidence interval • Non-linear risk measures • Delta, gamma, vega, theta, rho • No aggregation of risk measures across asset classes or instruments • Limited market scenarios that could include market correlations • Reprice portfolio • Parallel and non-parallel curve shifts • Aggregate portfolio risk per scenario • Linear risk measures • Swap/ bond equivalents • Notional Amounts Market Risk Measurement Where are we now? Where do we need to be? Option Sensitivity Measures ValueatRisk Duration/ PVof01 Volumetric Simulations

  34. Model 1 Base rates/ Currency market conditions Interest Rates Model 2 • Volatilities • Correlations Equities Model 3 Commodities Historical rates/ Discrete scenarios Model 4 Currencies An Overview of Corporate VAR Transactional Database Business 1 Portfolio Database Business 2 Projected Revenues Business 3 Projected Operating Costs Estimates of Cash Flow Distribution Mean Impact on Earnings

  35. Analyze Exposure Management Activities • Multicurrency borrowing/ investing, currency of invoice, & commercially-based hedging techniques • Financial instruments such as forwards, futures, swaps and options • Expected and out-of-pocket costs, benefits and risks of potential strategies; competitors’ actions • Accordance with overall corporate policy and acceptable from an accounting and regulatory standpoint, if applicable Investigate opportunities for natural offsets Evaluate alternative hedging techniques Cost/benefit analysis Strategic alignment

  36. Current trade flow data Portfolio system reports Accounting information Budgeted trade flow data Corporate Exposure Management:Match Tools to Risks Inflexible, committed Hard Flexible, optional Economic exposure estimates Soft

  37. 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% Foreign Exchange Interest Rates 10% Source of Commodity 0% Exposure Forwards Futures Equity Swaps OTC Exchange Struct. Options Hybrid Options Type of Transaction Der. Debt 1995 CIBC/Wharton End-User Survey Most-Used InstrumentsHedge Identifiable Exposure

  38. Market Views Impact Corporate FX Hedging Decisions 80% Sometimes 70% Frequently 60% 50% 61% 40% 48% 30% 33% 20% Wharton/ CIBC Wood Gundy 1995 End-User Survey: Frequency With Which a “Market View Impacts FX Derivatives Transactions 10% 12% 11% 6% 0% Alter the Alter the Actively Timing of Size of Take Hedges Hedges Positions

  39. Uncertain Markets Risk! Uncertain Exposures Mistaken Views Wrong Risk Measurement Methods Sources of Corporate Financial Risk

  40. Uncertain Markets Risk! Uncertain Exposures Mistaken Views Wrong methods Monitoring and Control • Monitoring implies performance measurement • Performance measurement is the science of attribution • Performance measurement requires a benchmark • Surprises require reassessment and response Corporate Risk Management Define Measure Manage Monitor

  41. Evaluate Management Reporting and Risk Management Monitoring Process Senior Management Management reporting and focused performance measurement are necessary to identify problems with the current risk management strategies Independent Risk Management/ Internal Audit Limits & Benchmarks Exposure Information Financial Product Information

  42. Summary: Corporate Market Risk Management is a Process Corporate Risk Management Define Measure Manage Monitor

  43. Ian Giddy Ian H. Giddy NYU Stern School of Business 44 West 4th Street, New York, NY 10012 Tel 212-998-0332; Fax 212-995-4233 ian.giddy@nyu.edu http://www.giddy.org

More Related