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Credit Portfolio Management

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Title: Credit Portfolio Management


1
Credit Portfolio Management
  • Solvay Business School
  • December 15, 2003

2
Content
I. Introduction II. Driving forces for
developing Credit Portfolio Management
(CPM) III. The CPM function IV. Credit
derivatives - The most broadly used instruments
by CPM Appendix The Credit Derivatives Market
Evolution
3
I. Introduction
4
Introduction
  • A Banks capital is used as a cushion to insure
    depositors against massive losses on the asset
    side that would hit not only the equity but also
    the depositors
  • A minimum capital level is required to avoid bank
    runs where all the depositors ask to withdraw
    their money
  • At the same time, shareholders would like to
    minimise the capital size in order to increase
    their return gt there is a need to optimise the
    capital
  • In a word, Credit Portfolio Managements mission
    is to manage the risk capital in the credit
    (loans) portfolio while increasing the return,
    thereby improving the return/risk profile of the
    Bank

Assets
Liabilities
Cash and Government Bonds
Capital
Loans
Deposits
I. Introduction
5
II. Driving forces for CPM
6
External forces
  • Credit downturn
  • Recent precipitous declines in the Corporate
    world are a serious threat to commercial banks
    and uncertainty over future still reigns
  • Advances in the measurement and management of
    credit risks
  • Revolution in the science of credit risk
    measurement (widespread adoption of risk rating,
    expected loss, economic capital methodologies)
    and development of sophisticated credit portfolio
    models
  • Increasing liquidity in the credit markets
  • The take-off of credit derivatives has been
    creating new possibilities for risk
    transformation through innovative structures

II. Driving forces for CPM
7
External forces
  • Divergence of economic capital and regulatory
    capital
  • In current BIS capital rules, risk weighting is
    still a function of the nature of the issuer and
    not a function of the credit quality of the
    issuer.
  • This divergence between economic and regulatory
    capital creates real economic costs for
    commercial Banks and have an adverse impact on
    shareholder value and competitiveness as banks
  • Avoid economic transactions that use regulatory
    capital inefficiently (A)
  • Enter uneconomic transactions that use regulatory
    capital efficiently (B)

B
A
II. Driving forces for CPM
8
Internal forces
  • Creation of shareholder value
  • Across the whole European banking industry, the
    return required by shareholders is increasing.
    ROE targets increasingly difficult to meet with a
     buy-and-hold  credit portfolio
  • Need for active management of the credit
    portfolio
  • Passively managed loan portfolios naturally
    deteriorate (a bank loan never trades above par
    value, unlike bonds)
  • Dynamics of credit quality
  • Wrong to believe that a rigorous credit approval
    process when a loan is first granted can hold
    good through the life of that loan credit
    quality is dynamic

II. Driving forces for CPM
9
Effects
  • Banks should be ready to act much quicker when
    the quality of a borrower starts to deteriorate
  • Portfolio management tools such as selling,
    hedging or securitising should be used to reduce
    exposures before there is a significant fall in
    the secondary market price
  • In recent years, many leading banks have
    appointed specialist portfolio managers to take
    responsibility for their loan books
  • Empowerment of portfolio managers to enforce the
    discipline is the key success factor

II. Driving forces for CPM
10
III. The CPM function
11
With or without CPM
Without CPM
With CPM
  • A Bank can only originate assets where it has
    client relationships
  • Without management of the portfolio this leads to
    concentrations (either at a name, asset class,
    industry or geography level), leaving ING with
    all its eggs in one basket
  • ING actively manages the portfolio, reducing risk
    in certain areas where it has (valuable) client
    business
  • The risks ING takes are now less concentrated and
    as spread out as possible
  • CPM achieves this through concrete steps
    described below, in line with its mandate

III. The CPM function
12
CPMs objectives
  • Manage credit risk economic capital
  • Maintain economic capital constant across
    business cycles by managing volatility of losses
    and concentration
  • Improve return/risk profile (Sharpe ratio, ROE,
    ) of the reference credit portfolio
  • Support business growth (by releasing limits on
    key commercial relationships) transfer pricing
    involved

III. The CPM function
13
A. Manage Economic Capital
  • Economic Capital is a function of the Unexpected
    Loss (Standard Deviation of Losses) and of
    Retained Risk EC RR x UL x 7
  • Economic Capital allows to cover the losses in
    99.95 of the cases, which is the minimum
    required to obtain a Aa Credit Rating for the
    Bank (currently A (SP) - Aa3(Moodys))

III. The CPM function
14
A. Manage Economic Capital
Evolution of Losses
Distribution of Losses
Losses
Time
III. The CPM function
15
A. Manage Economic Capital
Losses
Time
  • The objective is to maintain economic capital
    constant across business cycles
  • The key word is DIVERSIFICATION - diversification
    of the underlying portfolio reduces the
    volatility of the losses and, thereby, economic
    capital

III. The CPM function
16
B. Improve Return/ Risk Profile
Return
Assets performing above average
Efficient Frontier
Assets performing below average
Risk
  • The objective is to increase the return/risk
    profile of the credit portfolio
  • This can be achieved by increasing the return or
    reducing the risk of underperforming assets

III. The CPM function
17
C. Support Business growth
  • The objective is to help the Business to grow
    even if limits on the best clients are fully
    used.
  • This can be done via hedging excesses of limits
  • The cost of hedging has to be compensated by
    returns on the loan and non-credit incomes
    (return on assets)

III. The CPM function
18
In practice
1
2
3
III. The CPM function
19
Instruments at our disposal
Out of, and into CPMs own Budget
Out of Businesses Budget
III. The CPM function
20
IV. Credit derivatives
21
Todays fastest growing derivatives market
20.7
23.5
Source British Bankers Association (2002)
IV. Credit Derivatives
22
Instruments
Source British Bankers Association (2002)
IV. Credit Derivatives
23
Instruments
  • Various instruments are used by Credit Portfolio
    Managers, mainly in unfunded format
  • The most commonly used are
  • The Credit Default Swap (CDS)
  • The synthetic securitisation (CDO and the like)

IV. Credit Derivatives
24
The Credit Default Swap
  • A Credit Default Swap synthetically transfers the
    credit risk of a reference asset between two
    counterparties
  • The protection buyer (ING in this case) pays a
    fixed perdiodic fee (usually expressed in basis
    points per annum on the notional amount) to the
    counterparty
  • The protection seller makes no payment unless
    some specified credit event relating to the
    reference entity (underlying asset) occurs during
    the life of the transaction, in which case the
    protection seller is obligated to make a payment
    via the settlement process

IV. Credit Derivatives
25
The Credit Default Swap
  • ING can also sell protection to a counterparty
    through a CDS
  • ING receives the periodic fee payments
  • In case of Credit Event, ING would have to pay
    the contingent payment through the settlement
    process
  • Same as the previous situation but ING takes an
    opposite position

IV. Credit Derivatives
26
The Credit Default Swap
  • A Credit Event triggers the Credit Default Swap
    and leads to the settlement of the transaction
  • Three Credit Events are currently the market
    standard
  • Bankruptcy the Reference Entity has filed for
    protection under Chapter 11 or an equivalent
    bankruptcy legislation
  • Failure to Pay the Reference Entity has failed
    to pay any interest or principal of one of its
    obligation (loan, bond,)
  • Restructuring One or more obligations of the
    Reference Entity have been restructured (maturity
    extension, coupon reduction, change in ranking,)
    after a deterioration of its creditworthiness

IV. Credit Derivatives
27
The Credit Default Swap
Cash Settlement
Physical Settlement
  • The Physical Settlement is the most commonly used
  • The Buyer of Protection delivers to the Seller an
    Obligation of the Reference Entity
  • The Seller pays to the Buyer the par Value of the
    Obligation
  • The Seller has then received an asset paid at
    100 with a value lower than 100
  • The Cash Settlement is less commonly used by the
    market
  • The Buyer of Protection calculates the remaining
    (market) price of an Obligation of the Reference
    Entity
  • (100 - remaining price) is considered as the
    loss given default on the Reference Entity. It
    has to be paid by the Seller (taking into account
    the notional of the transaction) to the Buyer

IV. Credit Derivatives
28
The securitisation
  • What is a securitisation?
  • Process of transferring risks associated with a
    pool of assets from one party to another
  • Risks are capped at the level of first loss and
    other enhancements
  • Risk can be tranched to meet investor appetite
  • Risk can be physically transferred or
    synthetically transferred

IV. Credit Derivatives
29
The cash securitisation
IV. Credit Derivatives
30
The synthetic securitisation
IV. Credit Derivatives
31
Examples of CPM transactionsDisinvestment -
Single name hedge
  • Suppose that Renault SA represents a big
    concentration in INGs credit portfolio and,
    therefore, is a good candidate for disinvestment
  • CPM buys protection on Renault SA for an amount
    of say, 20 mln, with a maturity of 3 years
  • CPM pays 55 bps (0.55) per annum to its
    counterparty in exchange for the protection
  • The risk on Renault SA (up to 20 mln) is
    effectively transferred to the counterparty
  • In terms of risk, Renault SA has been disinvested
    (even though it remains on the Balance Sheet)

Credit Risk on Renault SA
IV. Credit Derivatives
32
Examples of CPM transactionsDisinvestment -
Synthetic securitisation
Asset Backed Commercial Paper
Credit Default Swap
2 Credit Default Swaps
Conduit
Liabilities
Assets
Reference Portfolio of 100 weighted assets
ING 1,5 bln Reference Portfolio of 100
weighted assets
ABCP Investors
0 weighted assets
ABCP
ABCP (A-1/P-1)
Super Senior
Credit Default Swap (0 Risk Weighted)
Invested ABCP proceeds
SPV
Liabilities
Assets
0 weighted assets
Notes
Note Principaland Interest
Bonds A1
Invested Notes proceeds
A2
Rated Notes
Junior Credit Default Swap (0 Risk Weighted)
A3
A4
Collateral
Retained First Loss
Not rated
Deposit/Repo Arrangements
IV. Credit Derivatives
Long Term Credit Linked Notes
33
Examples of CPM transactionsRe-investment -
Synthetic securitisation
  • Synthetic CDO transactions are composed of 70/80
    underlying companies rated at least Baa2/BBB
  • The usual average rating of the underlying
    companies is A2/A
  • The Aa3/AA- rated Apple transactions represent a
    good way to re-invest into diversification while
    minimising Event Risk
  • Recent Variations
  • Index of Credits (900 names, industry hedging on
    ING concentrations, fixed recovery rate,)
  • Management allowing for substitutions (subject to
    specific constraints)
  • CDO made of tranches of underlying CDOs

Super Senior Tranche
Senior Tranche
AA/AA- implied rated Mezzanine Tranche
Equity
Pool of 70/80 companies originated by counterparty
IV. Credit Derivatives
34
Appendix The Credit Derivatives Market Evolution
35
Todays fastest growing derivatives market
20.7
23.5
Source British Bankers Association (2002)
Appendix
36
Credit Derivatives Market Evolution
Source British Bankers Association (2002)
Appendix
37
Credit Derivatives Market Evolution
Risk Transfer
Insurance Cos
Banks
Source British Bankers Association (2002)
Appendix
38
Credit Derivatives Market Evolution
Source British Bankers Association (2002)
Appendix
39
Credit Derivatives Market Evolution
  • Growth has, again, surpassed expectations
  • Obvious risk transfer from banks to insurance
    companies
  • Portfolio transactions popularity has increased
  • Reference entities nature has changed

Appendix
40
Credit Derivatives Market Evolution
  • Credit default swaps
  • Market share has actually increased to 45 in
    2001
  • 43 expected market share in 2004
  • Portfolio transactions
  • Not even included in the 1997/1998 Survey
  • 22 market share in 2001
  • 26 expected market share in 2004
  • No other instrument accounts for more than 8 of
    the market in 2001

Appendix
41
Credit Derivatives Market Evolution
Source British Bankers Association (2002)
Appendix
42
Credit Derivatives Market Evolution
Source British Bankers Association (2000)
Appendix
43
Credit Portfolio Management
  • Solvay Business School
  • December 15, 2003
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