search query: @keyword CVA / total: 1
reference: 1 / 1
« previous | next »
Author: | Laakso, Svante |
Title: | The pricing of credit valuation adjustment for over-the-counter traded derivatives |
Publication type: | Master's thesis |
Publication year: | 2013 |
Pages: | 81 + [11] Language: eng |
Department/School: | Tuotantotalouden laitos |
Main subject: | Yritysstrategia ja kansainvälinen liiketoiminta (TU-91) |
Supervisor: | Wallenius, Hannele |
Instructor: | Kaila, Ruth |
OEVS: | Electronic archive copy is available via Aalto Thesis Database.
Instructions Reading digital theses in the closed network of the Aalto University Harald Herlin Learning CentreIn the closed network of Learning Centre you can read digital and digitized theses not available in the open network. The Learning Centre contact details and opening hours: https://learningcentre.aalto.fi/en/harald-herlin-learning-centre/ You can read theses on the Learning Centre customer computers, which are available on all floors.
Logging on to the customer computers
Opening a thesis
Reading the thesis
Printing the thesis
|
Location: | P1 Ark Aalto 184 | Archive |
Keywords: | CVA BCVA counterparty risk derivatives OTC |
Abstract (eng): | The purpose of this thesis is to contemplate the theory and practical aspects of credit valuation adjustment pricing for over-the-counter traded derivatives. Furthermore, an internal pricing framework based on Monte Carlo simulations has be introduced and compared with the standard models proposed by the Basel III regulation. Counterparty credit risk is one of the most urgent challenges facing the modern financial system and it is now considered by many market participants to be the single most important financial risk to manage. New regulatory changes have made counterparty credit risk and credit value adjustment one of the most debated topics in the field of quantitative finance. The Basel regulatory framework has introduced the concept of credit valuation adjustment in order to mitigate counterparty risk for over-the-counter traded derivatives. Furthermore, new accounting rules require a mark-to-market of derivative positions that includes the possibility of counterparty default. Credit valuation adjustment is the market value of the counterparty credit risk. I.e. it is the difference between the risk-free value of a portfolio and the portfolio value that takes into account the possibility of counterparty default. The credit valuation adjustment component depends on default probability, expected exposure, the recovery rate and on the correlation between them. It is also highly model-dependent and an alarming result is that the standardized models presented by the Basel regulatory framework seem to be underestimating the counterparty risk. At the moment, there exists no industry standard as how counterparty credit risk should be priced. Due to the complexity of credit valuation adjustment, simple add-on methods are inevitably inadequate to measure risk. Consequently, I have used a pricing framework relying on Monte Carlo simulations, this is also the approach adopted by most investment banks. |
ED: | 2013-07-31 |
INSSI record number: 46986
+ add basket
« previous | next »
INSSI