Are both UL Contribution and Risk Contribution necessary?

Tracy M. Nolte

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The study notes and the video for Credit Risk Reading 4, "Capital Structure in Banks" discuss both UL Contribution and Risk Contribution. They each also work identical 2 asset portfolio to determine the risk contribution from each loan...though the risk contribution results are somewhat different.

While I know that UL Contribution is in the GARP 2026 texts, I cannot find any corresponding language in the Schroeck chapter (CR reading 4) which references the methodology called "Risk Contribution" though the in the video, the presenter goes to great pains to walk us through this particular concept.

Adding to my confusion, the LOS for this topic does not explicitly offer the method we should be using however I presume it would be the approach articulated in the text, i.e., UL Contribution.

To be fair, I may be missing something entirely but can you help clarify which formula/process of calculating the UL contribution should I focus on for this reading?

Finally, the portfolio unexpected loss and contribution results using the Risk Contribution approach versus the UL Contribution approach are different and the example on slide 27 appears incorrect. UL for exposure 1 and 2 are correct on slide 26, but incorrect on slide 27 and this results in the UL_portfolio and the contribution to unexpected loss being incorrect on slide 27.

*edited for words..so many words
 
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The study notes and the video for Credit Risk Reading 4, "Capital Structure in Banks" discuss both UL Contribution and Risk Contribution. They each also work identical 2 asset portfolio to determine the risk contribution from each loan...though the risk contribution results are somewhat different.

While I know that UL Contribution is in the GARP 2026 texts, I cannot find any corresponding language in the Schroeck chapter (CR reading 4) which references the methodology called "Risk Contribution" though the in the video, the presenter goes to great pains to walk us through this particular concept.

Adding to my confusion, the LOS for this topic does not explicitly offer the method we should be using however I presume it would be the approach articulated in the text, i.e., UL Contribution.

To be fair, I may be missing something entirely but can you help clarify which formula/process of calculating the UL contribution should I focus on for this reading?

Finally, the portfolio unexpected loss and contribution results using the Risk Contribution approach versus the UL Contribution approach are different and the example on slide 27 appears incorrect. UL for exposure 1 and 2 are correct on slide 26, but incorrect on slide 27 and this results in the UL_portfolio and the contribution to unexpected loss being incorrect on slide 27.

*edited for words..so many words
@Tracy M. Nolte

The Learning Objective for Credit Risk Reading 4 (Schroeck, Capital Structure in Banks) focuses on describing and calculating unexpected loss (UL) and understanding its role in economic capital. The text clearly develops standalone UL and portfolio UL using correlation—specifically the two-asset portfolio formula ULp = sqrt(UL1^2 + UL2^2 + 2ρUL1UL^2). However, it does not explicitly introduce the “Risk Contribution.” method.

What the video refers to as “Risk Contribution” is the Euler (marginal) allocation approach, which decomposes portfolio UL into contributions that sum exactly to total portfolio risk. While this is essentially the same as capital allocation and the RAROC frameworks, it is just different terminology.

For exam purposes, you should focus on calculating standalone UL, portfolio UL with correlation, and understanding how unexpected loss drives economic capital and capital structure decisions. If GARP asks about contributions, they are most likely referring to the marginal (Euler) allocation consistent with portfolio risk theory, but unless explicitly stated, the core expectation remains the calculation and interpretation of UL and portfolio UL.

I will look into slide 27 and see if I can identify the issue. Thanks for letting us know Tracy!
 
Again, massively helpful and thanks for the clarity.

I think I see how Risk Constribution framework is relevant now. In the video David (I think) discusses it as being a similar but perhaps more useful conceptualization (my words, not his). In hindsight, looking at it now it appears the differing results between the two equations may have spurred my confusion and I got "stuck" thinking I had missed something from the notes.
 
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