The Course will provide a brief overview of the financial risk management practices in place in modern financial institutions and describe the evolutions from a developmental perspective. It will concentrate on identifying and quantifying an institution’s risk appetite and a case study will challenge participants to apply these concepts in a situation depicted from the “real world”.
Further, the course will dive into the complexities of managing risks for various asset management functions and apply consacrated measures to assess risk and return from an investor’s and a regulator’s perspective. Specifically, risks of derivative contracts will be analyzed separately and participants will be challenged to derive appropriate risk reports for a derivatives book via a dedicated case study.
Given the importance and specifics of the hedge funds industry, the course will dedicate a separate section for risk analysis in this industry class. Regulatory developments under way will be discussed and potential impacts will be assessed for the risk metrics employed for hedge funds and funds of hedge funds.
A last section will be dedicated to operational risks and the course will Focus on best practice means of assessing such risks, especially focusing on forward looking measures such as objective early warning systems.
- Overview of Financial Risk Management Practices
- Risk and Compliance Reporting for Investment Funds
- Portfolio Risk Management
- Measuring the Performance of Internationally
- Diversified Portfolios
- Overview of Financial Derivatives
- Portfolio Risk Management Using Derivatives
- Risk Management of Hedge Funds
- Funds of Hedge Funds
- Portfolio of Hedge Funds – Style Drifts
- Operational Risk Management
Objective:
This intermediate Level Five Days Course purports to discuss best practices methods and processes of measuring, managing, monitoring and controlling risks in financial institutions asset management activities.
It aims to discuss the fundamental challenges imposed by asset management services as they differ in scope and nature from traditional banking activities and address specific means to control market, credit and operational risks.
This course will review recent developments in the asset management industry, especially as they are impacted by the current financial crisis, identify related risks, review appropriate frameworks and discuss proactive means to assess risks in a dynamic and challenging environment for investment funds.
Certificate
Masters Consultant certificate will be issued to all attendees completing minimum of 75% of the total tuition hours of the course.
Who Should attend?
The course will be of value to professionals in the following areas:
_ Directors & senior managers of asset management companies
_ Risk managers
_ Compliance officers
_ Pension fund managers/trustees
_ Institutional investors
_ Corporate treasurers
_ Regulators & lawyers
_ Portfolio managers
_ Directors & senior managers of insurance companies
_ Private investors
Course Outline
Module 1
_ Overview of financial risk management practices
– Risk identification
– Corporate governance
– Regulatory framework (specific for the asset management segments)
– Market risk
– Credit risk
– Operational risk
– Other risks
– Limit systems congruent with risk appetite
– Case study on defining a fund´s inherent risk appetite
_ Risk and compliance reporting for investment funds
– Regulation and reputational risk
– Role of the regulator
– Reporting requirements
– Compliance issues
– MIFID implications
_ Asset Allocation
– Global vs. tactical asset allocation
– Optimization approaches
– Portfolio insurance
– Stress testing portfolio insurance
– Currency decisions
_ Portfolio risk management
– CAPM and applications to asset management
– Performance measurement and risk adjusted performance attributions
– The Zero Beta model & Brennan´s model
– Merton´s continuous time Version
Case study on optimal asset allocation under currency uncertainty Managing Risk in Asset Management -
– The Treynor measure
– The Sharpe measure
– Jensen´s Alpha
– Relationships between various measures
– The tracking error – the information ratio
– The Sortino ratio
– Recent developments and best practice refinements:
– The Morningstar rating system
– The actuarial approach
– VAR based analysis
– Taking management style into account
_ Timing analysis
– The Treynor and Mazuy method
– The Henriksson methods
– Decomposition of Jensen´s measure and Tiing evaluation
_ Measuring the performance of internationally diversified portfolios
– The international asset pricing model
– The McDonald model
– Pogue, Solnik and Russelin´s model
– Limitations and criticisms
Module 2
_ Overview of financial derivatives
– Forwards and futures
– Interest rate, currency and equity swaps
– Options
– Credit derivatives
– Use of derivatives in funds
– Controlling the use of derivatives in funds – Compliance issues
- Portfolio risk management using derivatives
– Role of derivatives hedging
– Static vs. dynamic replication
– Use of futures contracts
– Option related hedging
– Portfolio insurance as a hedging strategy
– Risk management of funds with derivatives
– Case study
– Risks of structured products
– Case study: portfolio of fixed income securities and derivatives to be evaluated against a benchmark. Special issues:
– Hedge efficiency
– Basis risk evaluation
– Setting a Limit framework
_ Risk management of hedge funds
– Equity hedged strategies
– Long/ short equities
– Market Neutral
– Market timing
– Relative Value strategies
– Convertible arbitrage
– Static returns
– Gammatrading
– Pricing inefficiencies
– Fixed income arbitrage
– Volatility arbitrage
– Capital structure arbitrage
– Event driven strategies
– Merger arbitrage
– Distressed securities
– Regulation D
– Global macro strategies
– Managed futures
– Systematic strategies
– Discretionary strategies
– Risk perspective of hedge funds strategies
– The due diligence process
Case study: analysis of a hedge fund and assessing its suitability for a pension fund
Module 3
_ Funds of hedge funds
– Industry overview
– Portfolio management strategies
– Style risks and diversification – the selection of strategy sectors
– The due diligence process – funds of hedge funds (applied example)
– Defining and managing portfolio risk
– Transparency (emerging regulatory trends)
– Active risk management & liquidity concerns
_ Portfolio of hedge funds – style drifts
– Definition and importance
– Detection, monitoring and control
– Performance attribution and risk exposure
– Peer Group analysis
– Applied examples
_ Operational risk management
– Importance
– Approach
– Operational risk framework
– Reporting and audit
– Key risk indicators
– Operational risk capital
– can funds learn from banks?