Credit derivatives and structured credit trading:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Singapore [u.a.]
Wiley
2009
|
Ausgabe: | Revised ed. |
Schriftenreihe: | Wiley finance
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Cover Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXVIII, 482 S. graph. Darst. 1 CD-ROM (12 cm) |
ISBN: | 9780470822920 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Credit derivatives and structured credit trading |c Vinod Kothari |
250 | |a Revised ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Singapore [u.a.] |b Wiley |c 2009 | |
300 | |a XXVIII, 482 S. |b graph. Darst. |e 1 CD-ROM (12 cm) | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 0 | |a Wiley finance | |
650 | 4 | |a Credit derivatives | |
650 | 4 | |a Credit / Management | |
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650 | 0 | 7 | |a Kreditderivat |0 (DE-588)7660453-6 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804139351780622336 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS
Foreword
xxv
Preface
xxvii
PART
1
MARKET, INSTRUMENTS AND MOTIVATIONS
Chapter
1:
Credit derivatives: Structure, evolution, motivations, and economics
3
Credit risk: The challenge of our times
4
Derivatives: The building block of credit derivatives
5
Securitization: The other building block
5
Instruments of credit risk transfer
6
Meaning of credit derivatives
6
What is a credit derivative?
6
A definition of credit derivatives
7
A quick guide to basic jargon
7
A quick example
9
Synthetic lending
10
Reasons for trade in credit risk
10
The elements of a credit derivative
11
Bilateral deals and capital market deals
11
Reference asset or portfolio
12
Structured portfolio trade
12
Basket trades
13
Index-based credit derivative trades
13
Credit default swaps (CDS) on asset-backed securities
13
Loan-only CDS
14
Protection buyer
14
Protection seller
14
Funded and unfunded credit derivatives
15
Credit event
15
Notional value
16
Premium
16
Tenure
16
Loss computation
17
Threshold risk or loss materiality provisions
17
Cash and physical settlement
17
Deliverable asset
18
ISDA documentation
18
viii
Contents
Quick introduction to the types of credit derivatives
19
Credit default swap
19
Total return swap
19
Credit linked notes
20
Credit spread options
20
Portfolio default swaps
21
Index trades
21
Credit derivatives and traditional financial guarantee products
21
Credit derivatives and guarantees
22
Credit derivatives and credit insurance
22
Credit derivatives and loan assignments
22
Credit derivatives and securitization
24
Motivations
24
Motivations for the protection buyer
24
Reducing regulatory capital
24
Economic capital relief
25
Offers easier alternative to securitization
25
Reduction of credit concentration
26
Better portfolio management
26
Solving cross-border problem
27
Enhancing RARoC
27
Trading motive
27
Motivations for the protection seller
27
Synthetic lending
28
Arbitraging opportunities
29
Yield enhancement
30
Risk diversification
30
Balancing the risk balance sheet
30
Far fewer expenses
31
Resolves problems of availabHity by cloning cash assets
31
Motivations for the traders and re-packagers
31
Economic impact of the credit derivative market
32
The positive side
32
Financial stability
32
Banks to focus on credit asset creation
33
Reducing the cost of credit
33
The supply of bank credit increases
34
Effective risk management by diffusion of risk
34
Securitization results into disintermediation: Credit derivatives
reinforces the role of commercial banks
36
Credit derivatives and pricing of credit risks
37
The negative side
37
Lack of transparency in transfer of risks
37
Cross-sector risk transfers
38
Contents
Transfer
of risks to the lesser informed
39
Increased leverage
39
Credit derivatives promote riskier lending
39
Insider trading
40
Unconfirmed trades and operational problems
41
Credit derivatives have not been tested in adverse market conditions
41
Chapter
2:
Credit derivatives: Market, evolution, and current status
47
Evolution of credit derivatives
47
Credit derivatives and secondary markets in loans
48
The emergence of credit-linked notes (CLNs)
49
Four stages of development
49
Pre-
1997:
Early period of skepticism
50
The
1997
and
1998
crises: Credit derivatives get a boost
51
Enron, WorldCom, Argentina
53
Standardization of CDS
53
Advent of index trading
54
Advent of credit derivative product companies
54
Synthetic balance sheet securitization
55
Current state of the market
55
Growth in credit derivatives relative to other OTC market segments
55
Major centers of credit derivatives activity
58
Major market players
58
Protection buyers
58
Protection sellers
58
Banks
60
Concentric nature of the credit derivatives market
61
Trading versus hedging motive
63
Insurance companies
64
Financial guarantors
64
Hedge funds
64
Dealers
65
Hedge funds and credit derivatives
65
Growth of the hedge fund industry
66
The advent of credit strategies hedge funds
66
Role of hedge rands and credit derivatives
68
Hedge funds as suppliers of equity to credit derivatives
69
Credit derivatives losses and hedge funds
69
Implications of the intensive hedge funds role
71
Major products
72
Reference risks: sovereign versus corporate
72
Credit quality of reference entities
74
Physical versus cash settlement
76
Contents
PART
2
SINGLE-NAME INSRTUMENTS
Chapter
3:
Credit default swaps
81
Meaning of CDS
81
Summary of terms
81
Numerical illustration
83
Main terms of the CDS
83
Reference obligation
83
Notional value
84
Premium
84
Credit events
85
ISDA s credit events
85
1
Bankruptcy
85
2
Obligation acceleration
86
3
Obligation default
86
4
Failure to pay
87
5
Repudiation/Moratorium
87
6
Restructuring
87
Common credit events
87
Notice of credit event
88
Terms of settlement
89
Physical settlement
89
Deliverable obligation
89
Cash settlement
89
Valuation of the defaulted obligation
89
Threshold amount
89
Collateral provisions
90
Funded CDS
90
How do the parties to a CDS encash value
91
Impact of time decay on mark-to-market valuation
92
CDS on sovereign names
92
Basket default swap
92
Portfolio CDS
94
Structured portfolio default swap
96
Binary swaps
98
Chapter
4:
Total rate of return swaps
99
Meaning of
TROR
swaps
99
CDS and
TROR
swaps
100
Impact of
a TROR
swap
101
Terms of
a TROR
swap
101
Reference asset
101
Credit events
102
Settlement methods
102
Examples of applications of TRSs
102
Contents
Advantages of
a TRS
103
Creates off-balance sheet synthetic assets
103
Avoids problems of availability
103
Avoids regulatory barriers in owning the target asset
103
Provides very high leverage
103
Avoids regulatory barriers in giving a traditional loan
103
Provides better security interest for the synthetic lender
103
Index-based TRSs
104
Structured
TRS
104
TROR
swaps and equity swaps
104
TROR
swaps and property derivatives
104
TRSs and camouflaged lending transactions
105
Chapter
5:
Credit-linked notes
107
Meaning of a CLN
107
Distinctive features of CLNs
108
Structured risk transfer through CLNs
109
CLNs issued by SPVs
109
Self-referenced CLNs 111
Chapter
6:
Credit default swaps on asset-backed
securities and derivatives exposures
113
Need for CDSs on asset-backed securities
113
Development of CDS on
ABS 113
Major differences between CDS of
ABS
and corporate debt
114
Documentation templates for different structured finance products
115
Special features in the documentation templates
115
Notional value of the swap
116
Credit events in the case of
ABS 117
Credit events in the case of MBS
—
physical or cash settlement terms
117
Meaning of Failure to Pay
117
Failure to Pay during the term of the transaction
117
Failure to Pay upon final maturity
118
Meaning of loss event
118
Bankruptcy as a credit event in case of CDS of
ABS 118
Rating downgrade to distressed level
119
Restructuring
119
Credit events under the PAUG terms
119
Physical delivery option under PAUG
119
Two modes of settlement: PAUG and traditional
120
Payments by the protection buyer
120
Payments made by the protection seller
121
Write-down
121
Principal shortfall
121
Interest shortfall
121
Contents
CDSofCDOs
122
Credit
events in case of CDS of CDOs
122
Contingent CDS
122
Notional amount of the transaction
123
Mark-to-market value
123
Interim payments
124
Credit events
124
Chapter
7:
Loan-only CDS
125
Meaning of leveraged loans
125
Market for leveraged loans
125
The LCDS market
126
Motivations of parties
127
Motivations of the protection buyer
127
Motivations of the protection seller
127
Distinctive features of LCDS as compared to vanilla CDS
128
European and US LCDS
128
Secured loans
128
Physical settlement
128
Relevant secured list
129
Auction protocol
129
Cancellability when no deliverables of required seniority exist
129
ISDA documentation for LCDS
130
LCDS basis
130
Reasons for basis spreads (LCDS: leveraged loans)
130
Reasons for basis spreads (LCDS: CDS)
130
LCDX
131
iTraxxLevX
131
Chapter
8:
Credit derivatives options and volatility trades
133
Credit spread trades
133
Credit default swaptions
133
Payer option
134
Receiver options
136
Out of money swaptions
140
Combination trades
140
Straddle
140
Strangle
141
Butterfly
143
Swaptions on indices
145
Knock out feature
145
Constant-to-maturity CDS
145
Distinctive Features of CMCDS
147
Genesis of CMCDS
147
Uses of CMCDS
147
Capped CMCDS
148
Index CMCDS
148
Contents Xiii
Chapter
9:
Equity default swaps, recovery swaps and other exotic products
151
Equity default swaps
151
Synthetic position on various elements in the capital structure
151
The intuitive idea behind equity default swaps
152
Emergence of equity default swaps
153
Preferred default swap
153
Recovery swaps
153
Combining a plain vanilla CDS with a digital CDS
154
Recovery swaps
154
Market in recovery swaps
155
PART
3
PORTFOLIO PRODUCTS
Chapter
10:
Portfolio credit derivatives and introduction to
structured credit trading
159
Portfolio credit derivatives vs. single-name credit derivatives
159
Nature of the tranches
160
Subordination and credit enhancement
160
Attachment and detachment points
161
Leverage
161
Tranching: the essence of structured credit trading
161
Why a portfolio for tranches
161
Key features of portfolio formulation
161
Managed versus index/ index- tracking transactions
162
Quality of credits
162
Diversification
162
Number of credits
162
Number and sizing of the tranches
163
Range of structured credit products
163
Funded and unfunded transactions
164
Special purpose vehicles (SPVs)
164
Chapter
11:
Introduction to collateralized debt obligations
167
Terminology: CDO, CBO, and
CLO
167
Types of CDOs
168
Cash and synthetic CDOs
168
Balance sheet and arbitrage CDOs
169
CDO types based on collateral
170
Par value and market value-based structures
170
Managed and static pool structures
171
Fully ramped, and to-be-ramped-up structure
171
Typical structure of a CDO
171
Basic economic drivers of CDOs
172
CDO Market and the Health of Banking
175
Growth of the CDO market 175
The spurt and spike in CDO activity in
2006
and
2007 176
CDO market trends
177
xiv Contents
Balance
sheet CDOs
177
Traditional, cash CDOs
178
The creation of a balance sheet CDO
178
Underlying assets
179
Diversity
179
Reinvestment period
179
Credit enhancement structure
180
Structural tests
180
Synthetic CDOs
180
The creation of a synthetic CDO
180
Advantages of synthetic CDOs over cash CDOs
182
Alleviates problems related to true sale
183
Arbitrage CDOs
186
Arbitrage cash CDOs
187
Legal structure
188
Underlying assets
188
Reinvestment period
188
Credit-enhancement structure
189
Illustration of potential returns from arbitrage CDOs
189
Arbitrage synthetic CDOs
189
Creating an arbitrage synthetic CDO
190
Measures of pool quality
190
Asset quality tests
191
Weighted average rating factor
191
Minimum and maximum weighted average coupon
191
Diversity tests
191
Concentration limits
191
Diversity score
192
Asset and income coverage
192
Over-collateralization test
192
Interest coverage test
194
Ramp-up period
195
The CDO manager
195
Qualities of the CDO manager
195
Balancing between equity investors and debt investors
197
The CDO manager s fees
198
Resecuritization or structured finance CDOs
198
Growth of structured product CDOs
198
Assets of structured finance CDOs
199
Collateral and structural risks in CDO investing
199
Correlation risk
199
Interest rate and basis mismatch
200
Cross-currency risk
200
Liquidity risk
200
Ramp-up risks
201
Contents
XV
Reinvestment nsks during the revolving period
201
Lack of granularity
201
Asset risks
202
Chapter
12:
Index trades
203
Reasons for popularity of index trades
203
Development of the index trades
205
Tranche trading
206
Index options and tranche options
206
iTraxx Europe
207
iTraxx Europe Investment grade
207
iTraxx HiVol
207
iTraxx Crossover
207
Price fixings in iTraxx
208
iTraxx Asia
209
iTraxx total return indices
209
LevX
209
Eurex iTraxx credit futures
209
Advantages of index-traded futures over OTC index trades
209
Manner of computing iTraxx futures prices
210
Treatment of default
210
CDX
210
ABX
211
Tranches
212
Composition of the index and settlements
212
CMBX
212
LCDX
213
TABX
213
Other indices
214
Index spreads and intrinsic spreads
214
Chapter
13:
Single-tranche synthetic CDOs, CPDOs, and
other CDO innovations
217
Single-tranche synthetic CDOs
217
Delta hedging
219
The concept of PV01
220
Why would structurers prefer single-tranche structures
220
Distinction between a traditional CDO and STCDO
220
Credit CPPI CDO
220
Constant proportion portfolio insurance
221
Basic idea of principal protection
221
Portfolio insurance
222
Illustration of constant proportion portfolio insurance
222
Enter credit CPPI
224
Contents
CPDOs 225
The
structure
of
CPDOs 225
Impact of leverage
227
CPDOs: from boom to bust
227
Leveraged super senior CDOs
227
The transaction structure of an LSS CDO
227
Performance of leveraged super senior CDOs
228
Case study: STARTS leveraged super senior CDO
228
Long/short CDO
229
Collateralized commodity obligations
230
Case study: Barclays CCO transaction
230
Chapter
14:
CDO case studies
233
Balance sheet synthetic transactions
233
DBS Bank s
Aleo
1 233
Transaction structure
234
The SPV
234
The notes
234
Risk transfer
235
Reference portfolio
236
The CDS
236
Investment of the collateral
237
Interest rate swap and put option
237
Economics of the transaction to DBS Bank
238
Economic capital relief
239
Basle II and the
Aleo
1
transaction
239
CAST
1999-1
Non-SPV structure
239
Features of CAST
1999-1 240
Principal protection to subordinate class
241
Investor interest
241
CAST
2000-1 242
Promise program by
KfW
Germany
243
Promise A
2002-1 244
Transaction structure
244
The notes and
Schuldscheine 245
The reference portfolio
246
Loss structure
246
Amortization of the notes:
246
Promise-1
2002-1 247
Later Promise transactions
248
Standard Chartered Bank s START series and Sealane
(Trade Finance) transaction
249
Notes
249
Portfolio
249
Trade Finance
CLO
249
Contents xvii
The notes
249
The portfolio
250
Synthetic credit asset securitization: SMART from Australia
250
Synthetic versus cash transfer of lease receivables
250
Credit protection
251
Asset structure
252
ANZ s Resonance Funding
252
Jazz synthetic arbitrage CDO
253
Hybrid between cash and synthetic structure
253
All that Jazz it has
254
Synthetic versus cash liabilities
254
The collateral manager
255
Liquidity facility
255
Over-collateralization and interest cover tests
256
Robeco
arbitrage synthetic CDO
257
White Oak synthetic CDO of structured obligations
258
The reference portfolio
259
Credit events
259
Funding
259
Regulatory arbitrage?
259
Chapter
15:
Credit derivative product companies
263
Development of rating-oriented vehicles
263
Derivative product companies: A general introduction
264
Market risk 2r>4
Credit risk 264
Workout risk 2f)fi
Case study of DPCs: Lehman s subsidiaries
265
Lehman Brothers Derivative Products
265
Lehman Brothers Financial Products
266
Credit derivative product companies: Development
266
Typical structure of CDPCs 267
Rating agencies conditions for CDPCs 268
Constitutional and legal structure 2i>9
Operating modes 270
Case study: Primus Financial 270
Portfolio 270
Financiais
of Primus 271
Quadrant Structured Credit Products 271
Asset Portfolio 272
Operating modes 272
Suspension mode
Winding-up mode 273
Capital model 273
Cash flow waterfall 273
xviii Contents
PART
4
PRICING AND VALUATION OF CREDIT DERIVATIVES
Chapter
16:
Approaches to quantification of credit risk
279
Credit risk: semi analytic approaches
280
Financial statement analysis
280
Multivariate models
280
Altaian s Z-score
280
Probit
and Logit models
281
Option-theoretic models
282
Merton model
282
Foundation of the Merton model
283
Critical factors in bankruptcy risk
283
Value of assets
284
The Merton formula for probability of default
286
Implementing the Merton formula
286
Adding simulation with the Merton formula
287
The KMV model
287
Measuring default probability
288
Asset value and volatility
288
Computing the distance to default
289
Computing default probability
290
Intensity or hazard rate models
290
Back-computing implied probability of default from the market
290
Pricing of credit risk in a defaultable bond
290
Computing probability of default from the market spreads
292
Chapter
17:
Pricing of a single name credit derivative
293
Establishing multi-period probabilities of default
293
Working with probability of default
293
Getting the probabilities of default from credit spread curve
294
Pricing of a credit default swap
295
Approach to pricing
295
Defining the cash inflows and outflows
295
Expected value of the inflow
296
Expected value of the outflow
297
CDS Price
297
Introducing details
297
Pricing of a derivative vs. pricing of a bond
298
Relevance of recovery rate
299
Valuation of a credit default swap
299
Value of upfront payment in a CDS
302
Chapter
18:
Pricing of a portfolio credit default swap
303
Basic principles of pricing of portfolio default swaps
303
Meaning of a portfolio
303
A portfolio without correlation
304
Contents
XÍX
Binomial distribution
305
Tranching of the risk
306
Pricing of the tranches
307
Simulation method to derive probability distribution
308
Comparing the results of binomial and simulation approaches
309
Introducing different exposures and different recovery rates
310
Introducing correlation
311
Incorporating correlation in simulation approach
311
Impact of correlation on the shape of the probability distribution
313
Correlation and tranche pricing
313
Market implied correlation and correlation trading
315
PART
5
LEGAL, REGULATIORY, OPERATIONAL, TAX AND
ACCOUNTING ASPECTS
Chapter
19:
Legal aspects of credit derivatives
319
Legal nature of credit derivatives
319
Credit derivatives and contingent contracts
320
Credit derivatives and actionable claims
320
Contract of guarantee or surety
320
Contract of indemnity
324
Credit derivatives and bank letters of credit
325
Credit derivatives and credit insurance contracts
325
Robin Pott s opinion on credit derivatives and insurance
327
Are they gaming, gambling or wager contracts?
327
Are they securities?
328
Are they investment contracts?
328
Bilateral contract or transferable
329
Credit derivatives and commodities
330
Enforceability of credit derivative contracts
331
Regulatory enforceability of the derivative contract
331
Enforceability of the reference obligation
331
Whether credit event?
332
Meaning of different credit events
332
Bankruptcy
333
(a) Dissolution
333
(b) Insolvency
333
(c) Arrangement or composition with creditors
334
(d) Institution of bankruptcy or winding up proceedings
334
(e) Winding-up resolution
335
(f) Administration, receivership, and so on
335
(g) Foreclosure action by creditors
335
(h) Analogous proceedings
336
Obligáton
acceleration
336
Obligation default
336
Failure to pay
337
Contents
Repudiation/moratorium
337
Restructuring
338
More than one credit event
339
Legal disputes on credit derivatives
339
Deliverable obligations
339
Service of notices and physical delivery
340
Demerger and the meaning of the successor entity
340
Fraud allegations
341
Significance of writing proper legal names of reference entities
341
Derivatives-related regulation applicable to credit derivatives
342
General bar on derivatives
342
Commodity futures law in the United States
343
Exemption to OTC derivatives
343
Commodity Futures Modernization Law
344
Permission for trading in credit futures on exchanges
345
Legal nature of total return swaps
346
Legal nature of credit-linked notes
346
Credit derivatives: Legal authority for banks
347
Whether a part of banking business
347
Whether banks can be protection buyers
348
Whether banks can be protection sellers
348
Legal authority of a party to enter into a derivative
348
Legal position of netting rights
349
Derivatives trades and need for netting
350
Bankruptcy laws and derivative contracts:
350
Bankruptcy Code: a safe harbor to credit derivatives
351
Early bankruptcy safe harbor in the United States
351
Financial Contract Netting Improvement law
352
The Bankruptcy Reform Act
2005 353
Revised definition of swap agreements
353
Definition of financial participant
354
Definition of master netting agreement
354
Power to terminate under section
561 355
Amendment of automatic stay provisions
355
Collateral rights
356
General provisions relating to collateral
356
Collateral rights in bankruptcy
357
UK insolvency law and netting
357
EU
law on collateral and netting
358
Netting in other countries
358
Assignment and novation
358
Choice of law
359
Restructuring credit event
360
Conseco restructuring event:
360
Argentina
361
Xerox
361
Goodyear
361
Marconi
361
Contents xxi
Modified restructuring definition
362
Modified Modified Restructuring
363
Restructuring practices
364
Chapter
20:
Documentation for credit derivatives
365
Overview of derivatives documentation
365
Legal impact of master agreements
366
Key features of ISDA Master Agreement
366
Conditions precedent
367
Netting
367
Grossing up for withholding taxes
367
Representations and warranties of both the parties
367
Mutual covenants on compliances
368
Events of default
368
Failure to pay
368
Breach of agreement
368
Credit support default
368
Misrepresentation
368
Default under specified transactions and cross default
368
Bankruptcy
368
Merger without assumption
369
Termination events
369
Illegality
369
Tax event and tax event upon merger
369
Credit event upon merger
369
Consequences of events of default
369
Consequences of termination events
369
Early termination
370
Early termination payments
370
Choice of jurisdiction
370
ISDA documentation for credit derivatives
371
Confirmation
371
Stand-alone confirmation
371
Opening paragraphs of the Confirmation
371
General terms of the Confirmation
372
Financial terms
373
Notice requirements
373
Credit events
374
Obligations and obligation characteristics
374
Settlement terms
375
Master Confirmation format
378
Physical settlement matrix
378
Documents in case of specific credit derivatives
378
Novation protocol
378
Credit support agreement
379
ХХЇІ
Contents
Chapter
21: Taxation
of credit derivatives
381
The tax basis of credit derivatives
381
Nature of credit derivatives from tax viewpoint
382
Guarantee
382
Insurance
382
Notional principal contracts
383
Option contracts
383
Key issues in taxation of CDSs
383
Taxation of the protection buyer
384
Integration with the reference obligation
384
Option contract treatment
384
Notional principal contract
385
Meaning of notional principal contracts
385
Are credit derivatives notional principal contracts?
386
Hedge tax rules applicable to notional principal contracts
386
No hedge tax accounting for NPCs
386
TROR
swaps
387
Is it a case of constructive transfer of the asset?
387
Taxation of CLNs
388
Taxation of the protection seller
388
Mark-to-market rules
388
Book/tax conformity and safe harbor rules
389
Tax treatment in other countries
390
Taxation of derivative transactions in UK
390
Taxation of CLNs
391
Tax treatment of closeout settlement
391
Chapter
22:
Accounting for credit derivatives
393
Whether derivatives accounting standards applicable?
393
The meaning of a derivative
393
Physical settlement deals
394
CDSs and financial guarantees
394
Total rate of return swap
397
Credit-linked note
398
Basics of derivative accounting rules
398
Basics of accounting for financial instruments
398
Basics of hedge accounting
399
Why and when hedge accounting?
400
Impact of hedge accounting
400
Conditions for hedge accounting
400
Fair value hedge accounting
401
Cashflow hedge accounting
401
Accounting for CDSs
402
If the CDS is a financial guarantee contract or credit insurance
402
If the CDS is not merely a financial guarantee contract
402
Contents
xxiii
Accounting
in the books of the protection buyer
403
No hedge accounting
403
Hedge Accounting
403
Fair value hedge
403
Cashflow hedge
404
Examples of CDS accounting in the books of a protection buyer
404
Accounting in the books of the protection seller
406
Examples
406
Accounting for
TROR
swap
407
Books of the protection buyer
407
Example
408
Books of the protection seller
408
Accounting for a CLN
408
Separation of embedded derivative
408
Books of the protection buyer
409
Books of the protection seller
409
Example
410
Valuation of credit derivatives
410
Chapter
23:
Regulatory capital and other regulations
on credit derivatives
413
Evolution of regulations
413
US supervisory guidance of
1996 414
Guarantee-like treatment
414
Examiner-determined treatment for the protection buyer
415
Dealing with structured credit risk transfers:
Guidelines of
1999 415
The
FSA
UK s guidelines of
1998 416
Basel II and credit derivatives
416
Basic approach of Basel II
416
Credit risk, market risk and operational risk
417
Three approaches to risk assessment
417
Basic approach on credit derivatives: Credit risk mitigation
419
General conditions for capital relief in case of credit derivatives
and guarantees
419
Operational requirements for credit derivatives
420
General rules for capital relief
420
Computation of the risk weights
421
Substitution approach
421
Tranched cover
421
Maturity mismatches
421
Risk weights in case of the protection seller
422
Basket default swaps
422
Treatment of first-to-default protection
422
Treatment in case of second-to-default protection
422
XXlw
Contents
Treatment in case of IRB approaches
422
Trading book treatment
423
Second pillar: Capital charge for residual risk
423
Chapter
24:
Operational issues
425
Credit derivatives procedures
425
Master Agreements
427
How trade is done
428
Confirmations
428
Trade information warehouse
428
Short form and long form confirmation
429
Confirmation options: electronic matching,
centralized counterparty
430
Outsourcing of backroom operations
430
Centralized clearing
430
Electronic trade matching services
430
Netting of payments and centralized clearing services
431
Assignments and novations
431
The operational risk issue
432
Growing number of trades
432
Trade capture errors and rebooking of trades
432
The problem of unconfirmed trades
433
Regulatory intervention on unconfirmed trades
433
Chapter
25:
Credit derivatives terminology
435
Index
463
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Kothari, Vinod |
author_facet | Kothari, Vinod |
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dewey-tens | 330 - Economics |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | Revised ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035661168 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:42:42Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780470822920 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-017715598 |
oclc_num | 226356067 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-945 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-92 |
owner_facet | DE-945 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-92 |
physical | XXVIII, 482 S. graph. Darst. 1 CD-ROM (12 cm) |
publishDate | 2009 |
publishDateSearch | 2009 |
publishDateSort | 2009 |
publisher | Wiley |
record_format | marc |
series2 | Wiley finance |
spelling | Kothari, Vinod Verfasser aut Credit derivatives and structured credit trading Vinod Kothari Revised ed. Singapore [u.a.] Wiley 2009 XXVIII, 482 S. graph. Darst. 1 CD-ROM (12 cm) txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Wiley finance Credit derivatives Credit / Management Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd rswk-swf Kreditderivat (DE-588)7660453-6 gnd rswk-swf Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 s Kreditderivat (DE-588)7660453-6 s b DE-604 DE-576;wiley image/jpeg http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz307648109cov.htm 20090618194219 Cover Digitalisierung UB Regensburg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017715598&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Kothari, Vinod Credit derivatives and structured credit trading Credit derivatives Credit / Management Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd Kreditderivat (DE-588)7660453-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4032950-1 (DE-588)7660453-6 |
title | Credit derivatives and structured credit trading |
title_auth | Credit derivatives and structured credit trading |
title_exact_search | Credit derivatives and structured credit trading |
title_full | Credit derivatives and structured credit trading Vinod Kothari |
title_fullStr | Credit derivatives and structured credit trading Vinod Kothari |
title_full_unstemmed | Credit derivatives and structured credit trading Vinod Kothari |
title_short | Credit derivatives and structured credit trading |
title_sort | credit derivatives and structured credit trading |
topic | Credit derivatives Credit / Management Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd Kreditderivat (DE-588)7660453-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Credit derivatives Credit / Management Kreditwesen Kreditderivat |
url | http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz307648109cov.htm http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=017715598&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT kotharivinod creditderivativesandstructuredcredittrading |