Search
  Shop

Banking Books

Finance Books

Insurance Books

Investment Books

Real Estate Books

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Home

Banking Books

The Essentials of Risk Management

The Essentials of Risk Management
Email a friendEmailView larger imageZoom

The Essentials of Risk Management

 
SKU:  

LA9780071429665

In Stock
Availability:   Usually ships in 1 business days
 
 

Risk management is no longer confined solely to risk management specialists. Stakeholders ranging from employees to investors must understand how to quantify the tradeoffs of risk against the potential return. The failure to understand the essential nature of risk can have devastating consequences.

Globally renowned risk and corporate governance experts Michel Crouhy, Dan Galai, and Robert Mark have updated and streamlined their bestselling professional reference Risk Management to introduce you to the world of risk management without requiring you to know the intricate formulas and mathematical details.

The Essentials of Risk Management is the first book to make even the most sophisticated risk management approaches simultaneously accessible to both risk and non risk professionals. It will help you to:

  • Increase the transparency of your risk management program to satisfy shareholders, employees, regulators, and other important constituencies
  • Keep on top of the continuing evolution of best-practice risk policies and methodologies and associated risk infrastructures
  • Implement and efficiently communicate an organization-wide Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) approach that encompasses market, credit, liquidity, operational, legal and regulatory, business, strategic and reputation risks
  • Navigate thorny areas including risk policies, risk methodologies, economic capital, regulatory capital, performance measurement, asset-liability management, and more
  • Efficiently allocate limited corporate resources to comply with the new generation of risk regulation and corporate governance regulation

As a non-risk professional or board member, you are being called on more than ever before to make sophisticated assessments of your organization's risk exposures as well as play a critical role in its formal risk management process. The Essentials of Risk Management tells you what you need to know to succeed in this challenging new environment.

 
List Price: $39.95
Our Price: $23.23 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25.
You Save: $16.72 (42%)
 
 

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.


Product Details
Author:Michel Crouhy
Hardcover:416 pages
Publisher:McGraw-Hill
Publication Date:December 14, 2005
Language:English
ISBN:0071429662
Product Length:9.0 inches
Product Width:6.2 inches
Product Height:1.3 inches
Product Weight:1.6 pounds
Package Length:8.9 inches
Package Width:6.2 inches
Package Height:1.5 inches
Package Weight:1.65 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 16 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.0 ( 16 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

57 of 61 found the following review helpful:


5An excellent introduction  Jul 11, 2006 By Dr. Lee D. Carlson
This book provides an introduction to the field of risk management for readers who do not yet want to get deeply involved in the mathematical formalism that is typically used. The authors wrote the book so that it is "accessible to everyone", and they have done a fine job. Those readers who need a more quantitative treatment will have to consult another book or the vast research literature on the subject. Risk management, as they see it, is an attempt to estimate both the `expected' losses and the `unexpected' losses, and being able to differentiate between these two concepts goes to the core of the subject. Thus the book emphasizes the "intuition" behind risk management, and not the formalism. However, one must not conclude from this that "intuition" and "formalism" are distinct, and the belief that they are has resulted in a lot of confusion (and financial losses) in recent years. The authors clearly do not believe that they are, but have merely emphasized "intuition" from a pedagogical point of view.

The authors classify risk into eight categories, namely market, credit, liquidity, operational, legal and regulatory, business, strategic, and reputation risk. Financial risk, as they see it, is composed of two of these, namely market and credit risk. Their discussion of corporate risk management is very interesting, in that it begins with the observation first made almost forty years ago that the value of a firm is not altered solely by financial transactions. This is due to their assumption of the perfect market hypothesis, which effectively suppresses the ability of the firm to gain significant advantages over an individual investor. Therefore with this assumption a firm should not concern itself with risks outside of the ones that all other firms face. This is an interesting conclusion, particularly in the context of using hedging via derivatives, as it implies that it cannot compete with ordinary self-insurance, due to the presence of transaction costs. The authors discuss in fair detail why the perfect market assumption is faulty, and therefore why managing risk with hedging is a viable strategy.

The regulatory environment, particularly in the banking industry, has enormous ramifications for risk management, as the authors discuss in the book. This is due in part to the Basel Accords of 1988 and 1996, and Basel II which is due to be in place at the end of 2007. The Basel accords are essentially a standardization for capital reserves, defining a `assets-to-capital' multiple and a `risk-based capital' ratio. The authors review the 1988 Accord and discuss the elementary relationships involved, including the `Cooke ratio' and how to obtain the credit equivalent for the off-balance-sheet exposures. They also discuss the reasons for the 1996 amendment, which essentially were the result of the new trading activities that banks were indulging themselves in. It would have been interesting if the authors had included a (historical) discussion on the efficacy of the Basel Accords in suppressing banking failures. They do mention the fiasco with Barings Bank, claiming that its demise would have been adverted if it were prohibited from racking up huge exchange-traded futures positions. This is certainly true, but any regulation needs to be validated by historical data, to the extent that this is possible, and this requires of course tracking of the financial institutions that are under the umbrella of the regulation. In this regard though, the authors do view bank regulation as a `research lab' for risk management, implying that they are aware of the need for validation of any regulations that are actually put in place. It will be fascinating therefore to see the impact of the new Basel II accords when they become active, and indeed observe, if possible, any `regulatory arbitrage' that occurs. This also brings up the question of how to assess the quality of the risk management strategies of a particular financial institution. The authors spend a little time discussing this, with one of them referring to a method analogous to credit scoring.

No book on risk management could be complete without discussion of academic research on the topic, for the reason that much of this research has found practical application and has greatly influenced portfolio management and risk valuation. The authors review four theoretical models, namely modern portfolio theory, the capital asset pricing model, the Black-Scholes option-pricing model, and the Modigliani-Miller theory of corporate finance. Even though the discussions are very short, one has to admire the authors' ability to avoid complicated mathematics in discussing all of these theories without sacrificing clarity. The more mathematically-mature reader may perhaps be annoyed with the omission of mathematical formalism, but a natural question that might arise for such a reader is whether or not risk can indeed be put in a general axiomatic framework that will encompass all of its different manifestations, such as credit risk, operational risk, etc. Such a framework would allow a complete mathematical characterization of risk, and would allow various general and quantitative statements to be made about it.

Due to the extent of mortgage portfolios in the United States at the present time, and due to the sensitive dependence of their values on interest rates, the authors spend a fair amount of time discussing interest-rate risk and how to hedge it with derivatives. Thus they speak of the `sensitivity' of financial instruments to certain risk factors, and study the case of fixed-income products via the `DV01' risk measure, which is the change in value of a security after a change in interest rate of 1 basis point. This measure gives a `first-order' approximation to the change in yield, but the authors show how to obtain a `second-order' approximation using the `convexity' adjustment.

For complex portfolios, the most popular method for risk management has been the value-at-risk or VAR, and so it is not surprising that the authors devote an entire chapter to it in the book. The authors view it as a more sophisticated method because of its ability to deal with volatilities and correlations. However, they point out that its efficacy is restricted to relatively short time scales and under `normal' market conditions. The fiasco at LTCM (Long Term Capital Management) is discussed as an example of the failure of VAR to measure risk over long time scales and under abnormal market conditions. They do not however give any detailed evidence for this claim, but a perusal of the research literature (surprisingly rather slim) reveals that LTCM made "major" errors in terms of their risk management, if viewed from the standpoint of VAR. This still leaves open the question as to whether it made "major" errors from the standpoint of some other method for measuring and evaluating risk that is possibly radically different from VAR.

21 of 26 found the following review helpful:


5A Non-Mathematical Approach  Apr 19, 2006 By John Matlock "Gunny"
The essense of investing is that increased risk should be compensated for by increased return. The problem lies in measuring and thus managing risk. Measuring risk is in the same category as predicting the future. The future is uncertain, the best guesses fail as bad weather, oil embargoes, or any of a whole list of other incidents change the situation.

Risk management isn't simply a matter of avoiding risk. It is instead a matter of identifying it, measuring it, appreciating its consequences and then taking actions accordingly. Insurance is perhaps the best example.

If a hundred sailing ships go out and 90 return, spreading the risk among all hundred ships compensates for the loss of the ten. And Lloyds is born.

During recent years several techniques have been developed to measure risk. This book discusses them in a non-mathematical way that can be used by both risk and non-risk professionals. In essence it brings sophisticated techniques to be accessible to a wide audience.

10 of 12 found the following review helpful:


4Good Introduction  Aug 01, 2007 By Y. Wong

I would highly recommend this book to the begginer/budding Risk Manager

For the experienced risk professional, this is a bit too fundamental.


4 of 4 found the following review helpful:


4Accessible introduction, sometimes imprecise  Feb 04, 2009 By David R. Harper
This is a broad, gentle introduction to risk. As it means to be non-technical, it is stronger as a discussion of qualitative issues like governance and weaker as an introduction to deep topics like Basel II and value at risk (VaR).

What I like about this book

It succeeds in putting risk measurement in perspective, from 10,000 feet. Chapter 1 nicely summarizes why risk measures are helpful and "dangerous." In this respect, the authors actually go further than Taleb's Black Swan by hinting at solutions. Taleb basically says we necessarily abuse models (my paraphrase of his entire book). We can all stipulate to that. The relevant question is, knowing our risk models do not describe natural phenomena, what do we do about it: how do we improve them and, a different question, what is their proper use (e.g., support, situation, context)? It's hard to find good study on model risk but this book touches on it quite a bit. In a way, i think the book's strength is as a primer on model risk.

Chapter 4 is helpful on risk governance, including roles (risk advisory director). The credit crisis, like some before, has re-surfaced the importance of governance.

It is a very accessible scan of various risk topics. The authors boiled down their formidable research on risk adjusted return on capital (RAROC) into a quick review. Great intro to economic capital and OpRisk VaR. Basel II is summarized into the smallest space I've seen.

What I don't like

Bending over backwards to be non-technical can lead to confusion. The central limit theorem (CLT), being slightly misstated, is given too much application (i.e., it speaks to properties of a sample mean under unrealistic assumptions, generally not an obsession of the risk manager who is concerned with tail outcomes).

Value at risk (VaR) is divided into three approaches. That's typical, but the review of the "analytic approach" propagates a common misunderstanding: it implies that the distributional assumption must be normal (e.g., a drawback of analytic approach is "assumes normality"). But of course extensions to parametric (linear) VaR models, that address skew and/or heavy-tails, are available.


1 of 1 found the following review helpful:


2Beware the title!  Sep 09, 2011 By Aasim
The title of the book is a bit misleading. The book should've been labelled "The Essentials of Financial Risk Management in the Banking Industry." I expected the "risk management" to be more general. Partly my fault, the book is probably not bad for someone who is looking for the specific information the book has to offer.

See all 16 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 About UsContact Us
BankerBusiness.comChrisSparksEntertainment.com