Horizon of Economic Capital for market risk

george.bilkis

New Member
What is the common practice in terms of horizon when setting Economic Capital for market risk?
Is it 10 business days as regulatory VaR?

Thanks,
G
 

ShaktiRathore

Well-Known Member
Subscriber
Hello there,
Under the basel approach, IMA method the common horizon is 1 year(250 business days) at 99% CL. The economic capital is usually calculated using the 1 yr horizon unlike the regulatory VaR.

thanks
 

george.bilkis

New Member
I am not sure I understand how this works.
Lets assume I am a financial institution with rolling daily portfolio of 1 million USD
Daily mean is 0.00012 (30% annual) and stdev is 0.02 (equivalent to 31.62%), lets assume that returns are normally distributed.
1-day-VaR 99%: -(0.00012-2.32634*0.02)*$1 million = $45,327

Regulatory Capital that I have to hold aside this position is roughly: 3*sqrt(10)*1dayVaR(99%)
3*sqrt(10)*1dayVaR(99%) = 3* $143,336 = $393,959

Economic capital calculation:Confidence level of AA rating: 99.95%
Critical value (0.005) = -2.5758
1-year-VaR direct calculation: -(0.3-2.5758*0.3162)*$1million=$1,114,549

So, I have a portfolio $1 million, day after day it does not change. And at the end of the year, on the Asset side, I still have 1 million (+ may be some change).
Against this asset I have to put aside as a capital more than I invested ?
If that was so, we would not see a lot of business go around.

What am I missing?
G
 

george.bilkis

New Member
Ahh,
That was a calculation mistake.
1 year Economic Capital (direct calculation) at 99.95 is of course $514,549. That makes sense in a way that it is somehow comparable to regulatory charge.

On the other hand, Deutsche Bank calculates EC at 1 year horizon at 99.98% confidence level
https://annualreport.deutsche-bank....rt/riskreport/marketrisk/economiccapital.html

At these levels EC would be: $819,473. More than twice from regulatory capital.
That surprises me.

Thanks for the answer, ShaktiRathore.

G
 
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