Real option and Value at risk: Difference between pages

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Real options are the valuable operational choices available to the owners of projects and of businesses.
''Risk management and measurement.''


For example, the options to expand, contract, defer or abandon the project (or business).
(VaR).  


Value at risk quantifies risk by estimating a maximum likely adverse change, within a specified time period, with a specified level of confidence.


The existence of valuable real options in favour of the owners generally increases the total value of a project or business.
A common application is the maximum likely loss on a market position, before the position can be closed out.


For this reason a real options analysis of a proposal may in some cases result in a decision to proceed with the project, in circumstances where other project evaluation techniques would have led to rejecting the proposal.
VaR is expressed as an amount of money, for example €.


<span style="color:#4B0082">'''Example'''</span>


However, it is also possible that a proposal may grant real options - perhaps inadvertantly - in favour of other parties.
If weekly VaR is assessed as &euro;250,000 at a 95% level of confidence, it means we are 95% confident that cumulative net losses for any one week will not exceed &euro;250,000.  


In such a case, the other parties might in future exercise their real options ''against'' the interests of the owners, causing losses to the owners.
So the probability that weekly losses will exceed &euro;250,000 is 5%, according to the VaR assessment.  


Such real options in favour of other parties are ''liabilities'' of a project or business, and ''reduce'' the total net value of the project or business.
The specified time period is commonly the planned holding period, or else the time lag before the holder of the position could normally respond to close out their loss-making position.




== See also ==
VaR is regularly used as a tool to define and manage risk appetite.
* [[Abandonment option]]
 
* [[Contraction option]]
 
* [[Deferment option]]
Value at risk is sometimes abbreviated as 'VAR', rather than 'VaR'.
* [[Expansion option]]
 
* [[Grant]]
It is sometimes written as 'Value at Risk'.
* [[Option]]
 
* [[Project appraisal]]
 
* [[Real]]
Value at risk concepts can be applied to any financial measure.
*[[Real estate]]
 
* [[Real options valuation]]
Common examples include cash flow at risk and earnings at risk.
* [[Termination option]]




== Other resource ===
== See also ==
* [[Media:2015_07_July_-_Hidden_treasure.pdf| Hidden treasure, The Treasurer, 2015]]
* [[Cash flow at risk]]
* [[Correlated value at risk]]
* [[Correlation]]
* [[Delta-normal method]]
* [[Earnings at risk]]
* [[Frequency distribution]]
* [[Hedging]]
* [[Historical simulation method]]
* [[Incremental VaR]]
* [[Leptokurtosis]]
* [[Marginal VaR]]
* [[Mean deviation]]
* [[Monte Carlo method]]
* [[Risk appetite]]
* [[Standard deviation]]
* [[Variance]]
* [[Variability]]
* [[Volatility]]


[[Category:Corporate_finance]]
[[Category:Risk_frameworks]]

Revision as of 15:00, 8 April 2021

Risk management and measurement.

(VaR).

Value at risk quantifies risk by estimating a maximum likely adverse change, within a specified time period, with a specified level of confidence.

A common application is the maximum likely loss on a market position, before the position can be closed out.

VaR is expressed as an amount of money, for example €.


Example

If weekly VaR is assessed as €250,000 at a 95% level of confidence, it means we are 95% confident that cumulative net losses for any one week will not exceed €250,000.

So the probability that weekly losses will exceed €250,000 is 5%, according to the VaR assessment.

The specified time period is commonly the planned holding period, or else the time lag before the holder of the position could normally respond to close out their loss-making position.


VaR is regularly used as a tool to define and manage risk appetite.


Value at risk is sometimes abbreviated as 'VAR', rather than 'VaR'.

It is sometimes written as 'Value at Risk'.


Value at risk concepts can be applied to any financial measure.

Common examples include cash flow at risk and earnings at risk.


See also