Risk Management in Finance
Risk Management in Finance
Risk Management in Finance
Volume 6, Issue 5, September – October 2019, pp. 37–43, Article ID: JOM_06_05_007
Available online at http://www.iaeme.com/jom/issues.asp?JType=JOM&VType=6&IType=5
Journal Impact Factor (2019): 5.3165 (Calculated by GISI) www.jifactor.com
ISSN Print: 2347-3940 and ISSN Online: 2347-3959
© IAEME Publication
S. Shobana
Assistant Professor, Department of Commerce, Rathinam College of Arts and Science,
Tamilnadu. India.
ABSTRACT
A common definition of risk is an uncertain event that if it occurs, can have a
positive or negative effect on a project’s goals. The potential for a risk to have a
positive or negative effect is an important concept. Because, it is natural to fall into
the trap of thinking that risks have inherently negative effects. If investor is also open
to those risks that create positive opportunities, investor can make investment project
smarter, streamlined and more profitable. Think of the adage. “Accept the inevitable
and turn it to your advantage.” That is what investor do when investor mine project
risks to create opportunities.
Keywords: Risk, Investor, Risk Management and Finance
Cite this Article: N. R Nithya, S. Shobana, Risk Management in Finance, Journal of
Management (JOM), 6 (5), 2019, pp. 37–43.
http://www.iaeme.com/JOM/issues.asp?JType=JOM&VType=6&IType=5
1. INTRODUCTION
In the financial world, risk management is the process of identification, analysis and
acceptance or mitigation of uncertainty in investment decisions. Essentially, risk management
occurs when an investor or fund manager analyzes and attempts to quantify the potential for
losses in an investment, such as a moral hazard, and then takes the appropriate action (or
inaction) given his investment objectives and risk tolerance
2. RISK MANAGEMENT
Risk management occurs everywhere in the realm of finance. It occurs when an investor buys
Treasury bonds over corporate bonds, when a fund manager hedges his currency exposure
with currency derivatives and when a bank performs a credit check on an individual before
issuing a personal line of credit. Stockbrokers use financial instruments like options and
futures, and money managers use strategies like portfolio and investment diversification to
mitigate or effectively manage risk.
Inadequate risk management can result in severe consequences for companies,
individuals, and the economy. For example, the subprime mortgage meltdown in 2007 that
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N. R Nithya S. Shobana
helped trigger the Great Recession stemmed from bad risk-management decisions, such as
lenders who extended mortgages to individuals with poor credit; investment firms who
bought, packaged, and resold these mortgages; and funds that invested excessively in the
repackaged, but still risky, mortgage-backed securities (MBS).
• Risk management is the process of identification, analysis and acceptance or
mitigation of uncertainty in investment decisions.
• Risk is inseparable from return in the investment world.
• A variety of tactics exist to ascertain risk; one of the most common is standard
deviation, a statistical measure of dispersion around a central tendency.
• Beta, also known as market risk, is a measure of the volatility, or systematic risk,
of an individual stock in comparison to the entire market.
• Alpha is a measure of excess return; money managers who employ active
strategies to beat the market are subject to alpha risk.
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Risk Management in Finance
prospect theory, an area of behavioral finance introduced by Amos Tversky and Daniel
Kahneman in 1979, investors exhibit loss aversion: They put more weight on the pain
associated with a loss than the good feeling associated with a profit.
Often, what investors really want to know is not just how much an asset deviates from its
expected outcome, but how bad things look way down on the left-hand tail of the distribution
curve. Value at risk (VAR) attempts to provide an answer to this question. The idea behind
VAR is to quantify how large a loss on investment could be with a given level of confidence
over a defined period.
The confidence level is a probability statement based on the statistical characteristics of
the investment and the shape of its distribution curve.
Of course, even a measure like VAR doesn't guarantee that 5% of the time will be much
worse. Spectacular debacles like the one that hit the hedge fund Long-Term Capital
Management in 1998 remind us that so-called "outlier events" may occur. In the case of
LTCM, the outlier event was the Russian government's default on its outstanding sovereign
debt obligations, an event that threatened to bankrupt the hedge fund, which had highly
leveraged positions worth over $1 trillion; if it had gone under, it could have collapsed the
global financial system. The U.S. government created a $3.65-billion loan fund to cover
LTCM's losses, which enabled the firm to survive the market volatility and liquidate in an
orderly manner in early 2000.
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N. R Nithya S. Shobana
passive vehicle like an index fund or an exchange-traded fund (ETF), investor might pay 15 to
20 basis points in annual management fees, while for a high-octane hedge fund employing
complex trading strategies involving high capital commitments and transaction costs, an
investor would need to pay 200 basis points in annual fees, plus give back 20% of the profits
to the manager.
The difference in pricing between passive and active strategies (or beta risk and alpha risk
respectively) encourages many investors to try and separate these risks (e.g., to pay lower fees
for the beta risk assumed and concentrate their more expensive exposures to specifically
defined alpha opportunities). This is popularly known as portable alpha, the idea that the
alpha component of a total return is separate from the beta component.
For example, a fund manager may claim to have an active sector rotation strategy for
beating the S&P 500 and show, as evidence, a track record of beating the index by 1.5% on an
average annualized basis. To the investor, that 1.5% of excess return is the manager's value,
the alpha, and the investor is willing to pay higher fees to obtain it. The rest of the total return,
what the S&P 500 itself earned, arguably has nothing to do with the manager's unique ability.
Portable alpha strategies use derivatives and other tools to refine how they obtain and pay for
the alpha and beta components of their exposure.
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Risk Management in Finance
As an investor will need to be keenly aware of inflation risk and select asset classes and
investment strategies with the potential to provide a “real rate of return” which is return above
the rate of inflation.
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N. R Nithya S. Shobana
Investors often get ‘one ties’ and are so convinced in the merits of a single investment that
they lose sight of the additional risk they take by owning too much of any single investment.
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Risk Management in Finance
acceptable or whether it is serious enough to warrant treatment. These risk rankings are also
added to investor Project Risk Register.
13. CONCLUSION
Risk is about uncertainty. If investor put a framework around that uncertainty, then investor
effectively de-risk investor project. And that means investor can move much more confidently
to achieve investor project goals. By identifying and managing a comprehensive list of project
risks, unpleasant surprises and barriers can be reduced and golden opportunities discovered.
The risk management process also helps to resolve problems when they occur, because
those problems have been envisaged, and plans to treat them have already been developed and
agreed. Investor avoid impulsive reactions and going into “fire-fighting” mode to rectify
problems that could have been anticipated. This makes for happier, less stressed project teams
and stakeholders. The end result is that investor minimize the impacts of project threats and
capture the opportunities that occur.
REFERENCES
[1] Reepu, Financial Risk Management. International Journal of Management, 9 (1), 2018, pp. 6–
9.
[3] M.Rajeswari. A Study on Credit Risk Management in Scheduled Bank. International Journal
of Management, 5 (12), 2014, pp. 79–89.
[4] Dr. N. Kannan, “Risk and Technology Management in Banking Industry”, International
Journal of Management (IJM), Volume 1, Issue 1, 2010, pp. 43 - 58
[5] Dr. J. U. Ahmed, “Customers Orientation and Service Quality of Commercial Banks: The
Empirical Evidence from State Bank of India”, International Journal of Management (IJM),
Volume 1, Issue 2, 2010, pp. 174 - 203
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