The Significance of Economic Capital to Financial Institutions
Vandana Rao
Introduction
Background on Economic Capital
Volatility and Capital: Measures of Risk
Conceptual Framework for Economic Capital Models and Required Inputs
Recovery Risk and Economic Capital
The Significance of Economic Capital to Financial Institutions
Economic Capital for Retail Credit Card Portfolios
Economic Capital for Counterparty Credit Risk
Economic Capital for Securitisations
Economic Capital for Market Risk
Measuring and Calculating Economic Operational Risk Capital
A Fundamental Look at Economic Capital and Risk-Based Profitability Measures
A Risk-Factor Model Foundation for Ratings-Based Bank Capital Rules
Allocating Portfolio Economic Capital to Sub-Portfolios
Spectral Capital Allocation
Evaluating Design Choices in Economic Capital Modelling: A Loss Function Approach
Economic capital (EC) is a relatively new concept. Although some of its roots can be traced to the 1980s, EC was introduced in financial institutions in the 1990s and has evolved into significant practical importance only in the last decade or so. A precise definition will be attempted later in the chapter. As an introduction, EC is a dollar number that serves as a common measure across all types of financial risks and captures the risk of unexpected losses or unexpected reductions in income in a business, a portfolio or a single transaction. EC is necessarily calculated at a portfolio level and attributed to each transaction within the portfolio.
Capital investments in an industrial organisation are on physical plant, machinery and equipment. Therefore, it is relatively easy to assign specific capital investments to particular project or business unit within the corporation. As a result, deriving the capital associated with a project is very tractable. All the focus then falls on deriving the appropriate discount rate for NPV calculation. By contrast, in a financial institution, there is little physical capital investment. Deriving the capital associated with a product or a
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