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Risk Management
Risk management
is the identification, measurement and control of risk - broadly defined -
within an organization. Every person in the bank has a role in the bank's
risk management activities. These activities are central to the bank's
culture and strategy, cut across disciplines and departments, drive the
decisions of investors and clients, and ultimately separate banks that
flourish from those that simply survive
Risk management
is neither easy nor obvious. Banks deliberately take on market and credit
risk in the hope of making a profit. Moreover, many of the institutions that
have suffered large trading losses believed that they already had adequate
risk management groups in place. In virtually all cases, however, the
problems boiled down to lack of oversight. People took on excessive risk and
nobody was watching.
Successful risk
management requires a background in practice as well as theory. Globecon's
Financial Risk Manager curriculum covers the theory, while a variety of
other competencies, Webinars and workshops cover the practical aspects of
specialized risk aggregation and quantitative tools such as stress testing,
value-at-risk and scenario analysis. Finally, the Risk Management Practice
Area includes less quantifiable dangers such as reputation and legal risk.
Globecon’s
educational objectives in this area can be divided into three broad skill
sets:
Diagnostics.
These focus on analyzing the client's situation and needs as a first step
towards advising the client on the appropriate solutions.
Alternatives.
These focus on the features, mechanics and pricing and use of derivatives
such as forwards, swaps, futures and options.
Market
Conditions. These focus on interpreting the yield curve, credit spreads,
equity prices and other market indicators to make hedging decisions.
Risk/Return
Analysis. These focus on using tools to analyze risks to the client and
the bank as well as the potential return to the client and the bank for
different financing alternatives.
Standard
capital markets learning systems include, but are not limited to, the
following:
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Asset/Liability Management
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Credit
Portfolio Risk
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Financial
Institution Analysis
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Fixed-Income
Analytics
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Interpreting
Market Indicators and Benchmarks
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Introduction
Derivative Alternatives
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Portfolio
Management
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Risk
Analytics
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Risk
Measurement
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Specialized
Derivatives
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Using
Derivatives for Hedging
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VaR
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