Abstract
This paper demonstrates that the building blocks of the insurance process, under similar assumptions, produce identical results to the option-pricing approach in the case of pricing individual loans. We examine the performance of a collective of such building blocks, using portfolio historical performance to endogenously parameterize the default cost function unique to a particular portfolio. Having estimated the appropriate default cost function, we can then specify the reserve requirement for a bank operating such a portfolio. In this respect, the additively of the Poisson parameter is a powerful feature, allowing one to decompose portfolio performance over time and homogeneous portfolio subsections. Portfolios with greater and lesser risk and profitability respectively are hypothesized, and a capital adequacy framework which equates risk across such portfolios is examined. Finally, we simulate the operation of the proposed capital adequacy model. Observed insolvencies are fewer than those observable under present regulation, and specific problems may be identified earlier than at present.
Volume
3:2
Page
72-83
Year
1999
Categories
Financial and Statistical Methods
Asset and Econometric Modeling
Asset Classes
Other Securities
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Capital Management
Capital Requirements
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Capital Management
Leverage
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Dynamic Risk Modeling
Solvency Analysis
Financial and Statistical Methods
Risk Measures
Tail-Value-at-Risk (TVAR);
Publications
North American Actuarial Journal