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Market BuVaR: A countercyclical risk metric

Author

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  • Wong, Max

Abstract

The malfunction of the value-at-risk (VaR) model during the 2008 credit crisis was a key risk management failure. This metric is now criticised for being too little, too late. An improvement is proposed — making VaR countercyclical and more robust to fat tails. The new metric is called bubble-VaR (BuVaR), the expected shortfall of a trading book portfolio with the effects of procyclicality removed. It involves inflating one side of the return distribution of an asset by a scaling factor called bubble that depends on the location of the present state in the boom-bust cycle. In a boom cycle, the negative side of the distribution is inflated, in a bust cycle, the positive side is inflated. Compared to VaR, BuVaR is countercyclical (it leads crashes), distinguishes between long and short positions (is asymmetrical) and provides an additional buffer for fat tails by recognising that crashes can happen only in the counter-trend direction. Thus, this method is useful for the purpose of a countercyclical capital buffer for market risk. The approach relaxes the VaR assumptions of independent and identically distributed (i.i.d.), and stationarity of variables. It postulates that the empirical phenomena of fat tails, skewness, volatility clustering and the leverage effect can be better understood by modelling the noise and cycle components together, instead of just the noise of the time series as modelled in VaR.

Suggested Citation

  • Wong, Max, 2011. "Market BuVaR: A countercyclical risk metric," Journal of Risk Management in Financial Institutions, Henry Stewart Publications, vol. 4(4), pages 419-432, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:aza:rmfi00:y:2011:v:4:i:4:p:419-432
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    More about this item

    Keywords

    value-at-risk; procyclicality; extreme events; countercyclical capital buffer; market cycles; time series analysis;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • G2 - Financial Economics - - Financial Institutions and Services
    • E5 - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics - - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit

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