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Modeling Credit Risk and Pricing Credit Derivatives (Paperback)
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Modeling Credit Risk and Pricing Credit Derivatives (Paperback)
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Diploma Thesis from the year 2001 in the subject Business economics
- Investment and Finance, grade: 1,0, University of Innsbruck
(Architektur/Bauingenieurswesen), language: English, abstract:
Inhaltsangabe: Abstract: Banks are financial intermediaries
originating loans and consequently facing credit risk. Credit risk
can be defined as the risk of losses caused by the default or by
the deterioration in credit quality of a borrower. Default occurs
when a borrower cannot meet his key financial obligations to pay
principal and interest. Banks increasingly recognize the need to
measure and manage the credit risk of the loans they have
originated not only on a loan-by-loan basis but also on a portfolio
basis. A precondition for diversification after the origination of
the loans is their transferability. But as it is wellknown
transferring credit risk of loans is difficult due to severe
adverse selection and moral hazard problems. That is why the use of
existing tools like loan sales has not been very successful in
transferring the credit risk on a broad scale. However, in recent
years, the development of markets for credit securitization and
credit derivatives has provided new tools for managing credit risk.
Credit derivatives are often described as synthetic loans which
reflects only too narrowly their common use and enormous potential.
More broadly defined credit derivatives are sophisticated financial
instruments that enable the unbundling and intermediation of
credit. A risk seller, which is the party seeking credit risk
protection, may want to reduce exposures while maintaining
relationships that may be endangered by selling their loans, reduce
or diversify illiquid exposures, or reduce exposures while avoiding
adverse tax or accounting treatment. A risk buyer, the party
assuming credit risk, may want to diversify credit exposures, get
access to credit markets which are otherwise restricted by
corporate statute or off-limits by regulation, or simply exploit
arbitra
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