Credit Conversion Factor and Matching: Difference between pages

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''Bank supervision - capital adequacy''.
1.  


(CCF).
Arranging that in a portfolio of assets and liabilities the cash flows generated by the assets can be expected to meet the liability payouts either because (1) the assets generate income of the right amount at the right time or (2) because the market values of the assets are linked to (positively correlated with) the market values of the liabilities.


The CCF converts an off balance sheet exposure to its credit exposure (Risk Weighted Assets) equivalent.


Off balance sheet exposures - like a guarantee - have a probability of becoming a credit exposure and shifting onto the balance sheet, for example if the guarantee is called.  
2.  


Equalising or approximating the modified duration of assets and liabilities in a portfolio, to manage interest rate risk.


The CCF is an estimate of this probability.


By multiplying the CCF with the value of the guarantee or other off balance sheet exposure, you get the expected value of the credit exposure.
3.  


Equalising or approximating both the modified duration and the modified convexity of assets and liabilities in a portfolio.


==See also==
 
*[[Capital adequacy]]
4. ''Financial reporting''
*[[Guarantee]]
 
*[[Off balance sheet risk]]
The Accruals concept in accounting.
*[[Risk Weighted Assets]]
 
 
== See also ==
* [[Accruals concept]]
* [[Correlation]]
* [[Diversification]]
* [[Immunisation]]
* [[Interest rate risk]]
* [[Modified convexity]]
* [[Modified duration]]
* [[Portfolio immunisation]]
 
[[Category:Manage_risks]]

Revision as of 11:26, 10 September 2020

1.

Arranging that in a portfolio of assets and liabilities the cash flows generated by the assets can be expected to meet the liability payouts either because (1) the assets generate income of the right amount at the right time or (2) because the market values of the assets are linked to (positively correlated with) the market values of the liabilities.


2.

Equalising or approximating the modified duration of assets and liabilities in a portfolio, to manage interest rate risk.


3.

Equalising or approximating both the modified duration and the modified convexity of assets and liabilities in a portfolio.


4. Financial reporting

The Accruals concept in accounting.


See also