The Role of Counterparty Risk in the Credit Crisis

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The Role of Counterparty Risk in the Credit Crisis Jon Gregory jon@oftraining.com www.oftraining.com Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 1

Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 2

Lessons Learned (2007-2009) Too big to fail concept is flawed Triple-A counterparties do not necessarily represent minimal counterparty risk Legal risks need to be carefully considered (rehypothecation of collateral, SPVs, netting) Market participants will inevitably create wrong-way risks (hedge funds, monolines, banks) You can easily disguise and repackage counterparty risk (CCDS, gap risk, legal risk, ) but you cannot easily get rid of it Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 3

The Role of Counterparty Risk in the Credit Crisis i) The OTC derivatives market in the context of counterparty risk Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 4

The Birth of OTC Derivatives IR and Currency CDS EQD Notional Outstanding ($Tr) 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 1H98 2H98 1H99 2H99 1H00 2H00 1H01 2H01 1H02 2H02 1H03 2H03 1H04 2H04 1H05 2H05 1H06 2H06 1H07 2H07 1H08 2H08 OTC dominate exchange traded derivatives But credit crisis has curtailed strong growth in derivatives markets Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 5

OTC Derivatives Market Characteristics of the OTC derivatives market Dominated by a relatively small number of large dealers Potentially highly complex and customised products Strong reliance on risk mitigation methods to allow gross credit exposure to grow exponentially The too big to fail assumption Many market participants, consciously or not, considered the probability of many institutions failing to be zero Monolines, large banks etc This had the impact of obscuring a lot of counterparty risk Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 6

Mitigating Counterparty Risk There are many methods available to mitigate counterparty risk in the OTC derivatives market Netting Close-out Additional termination events Collateral Hedging (Central counterparties) Yet we still ended up in a major counterparty risk crisis Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 7

Birth of the Crisis Both exposure and default probability were underestimated Default probability Lehman, monolines will never fail Sometimes based on backwards looking rating based methods Exposure Rehypothecation of collateral Collateral quality Poor assessment of wrong-way risk Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 8

The Role of Counterparty Risk in the Credit Crisis ii) Unilateral and bilateral counterparty risk Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 9

Unilateral Credit Value Adjustment (CVA) Allows the risky value of a derivative(s) to be represented as the risk-free value less a specific term This term is often referred to as the credit value adjustment (CVA) CVA unilateral LGD C PD C EPE Loss given default Default probability Discounted expected positive exposure This can be thought of as the expected value of the possible future losses on the contract or netting set of contracts Unilateral CVA is a cost Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 10

Unilateral CVA in the Old Days Bank Corporate Credit Rating Aa1/AA+ A3/A- Credit spread (bps) 10-15 200-300 Bank is too big to fail Bank charges corporate unilateral CVA If corporate asks for banks default probability to be taken into account, they get laughed at No CVA charges in interbank market (all too big to fail) When bank credit quality deteriorates, market becomes gridlocked Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 11

Bilateral CVA CVA I bilateral LGD C PD C EPE LGD I PD I ENE CVA unilateral Own loss given default Own default probability Expected Negative exposure Bilateral CVA is symmetric so counterparties agree on a price Example CVA Adjusted CVA BCVA Our point of view 3.480% 2.766% 1.967% Counterparty point of view 1.235% 0.799% -1.967% Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 12

Does Bilateral CVA Make Sense? Bilateral CVA has been widely adopted Many banks base CVA on their own default Accountancy rules permit this (e.g. FASB 157) Bilateral CVA has some potentially unpleasant features Total amount of CVA in the market sums to zero Risky value may exceed risk-free value Netting and collateral may increase CVA Hedging this component is problematic How to monetarise bilateral CVA to justify paying for counterparty risk Most institutions do this by selling CDS protection on correlated names Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 13

The Role of Counterparty Risk in the Credit Crisis iii) Counterparty risk in credit default swaps and tranches Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 14

CDS Counterparty Risk Long protection CDS position has wrong-way risk Positive MtM due to reference entity spread widening means counterparty credit quality is likely to be deteriorating Risk-free Risky Fair CDS premium 140 120 100 80 60 40 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% Correlation Best hedge for bilateral CVA Counterparty risk is easy to pass around but not easy to get rid of Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 15

Counterparty Risk on Tranches More complicated problem, depends when counterparty would default compared to the other names in the portfolio or index DJ itraxx Europe [22-100%] 39.3 defaults upwards 10.7 to 16.1 defaults [12-22%] Up to 5.4 defaults 125 name portfolio, 30% recovery rate assumption [9-12%] [6-9%] [3-6%] [0-3%] Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 16

Counterparty Risk on Tranches Counterparty risk varies substantially across capital structure [0-3%] [3-6%] [6-9%] [9-12%] [12-22%] [22-100%] Index 100% Risky prem / Risk-free prem 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% Correlation Massive wrong-way risk - worth little more than recovery value (40%) Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 17

The Role of Counterparty Risk in the Credit Crisis iv) Why monolines failed Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 18

Leveraged Super Senior Transactions Popular way of buying super senior protection via creation of triple-a product based on a super senior tranche in leveraged form Essentially, the wrong-way counterparty risk inherent in buying super senior protection is converted into so-called gap risk Gap risk is market risk from being potentially unable to unwind the leveraged transaction in time But the gap risk was more severe than assumed by rating agencies and issuers This can be proved theoretically via a thorough analysis of the cashflows Was also shown empirically during the first period of the crisis (August 2007) Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 19

Monolines and CDPCs Super Senior Tranches of Credit Portfolios have (arguably) little or no default risk Monolines aim to take advantage of this Free Lunch To generate a good return they will need to be highly leveraged They therefore have to avoid the mark-to-market volatility of these tranches which can be significant They do this by attaining a triple-a rating but not posting collateral Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 20

Problem with Monolines Rating agency mistakes It s not the absolute credit quality that is important Seniority of tranche and correlation are more important Basis for quantitative assessment of triple-a rating is flawed Risky prem / Risk-free prem [0-3%] [3-6%] [6-9%] [9-12%] [12-22%] [22-100%] Index 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% Correlation Triple-A Tranche Monoline Loss Exposure to tranche losses Capital Probability Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 21

Monoline Purchased Protection A monoline is a complex LSS structure LSS with multiple clients and so overall leverage vis à vie a single client is unknown Monolines run a very concentrated portfolio creating severe wrong-way risk They achieve a good rating via not posting collateral Doesn t make sense Protection purchased from monolines is practically worthless Can be proved theoretically Like LSS has been proved empirically (e.g. Merrill Lynch $10.8 billion in writedowns) Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 22

The Role of Counterparty Risk in the Credit Crisis v) Will central counterparties improve the situation? Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 23

Advantages of Central Clearing (I) Multilateral netting reduces overall exposure in the market Bilateral netting Multilateral netting A B A B F C F CCP C E D E D Other advantages of a central counterparty (CCP) Loss mutualisation - Legal and operational efficiencies Independent valuation - Liquidity Capital reduction - Standardisation Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 24

Disadvantages of Central Clearing Homogeneity is not necessarily a good thing Cost No incentive to monitor the credit quality of your counterparty Poor credit quality institutions may find it easier to build up large positions Institutions with better than average risk management will lose out Cost of entry (margin requirements etc) may be prohibitive for some counterparties, overall costs in CCP cleared markets higher than bilateral ones (Pirrong [2009]) Standardisation Custom products not possible (even small changes such as non-imm maturity date) Legal and operational risks Integrity of netting is absolutely critical across all jurisdictions CCP failure Would be catastrophic Will CCPs turn into another monoline story? Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 25

Conclusions Counterparty risk was always there but was not fully appreciated A VAR like revolution in counterparty risk management and CVA is required Simple ways of reducing counterparty risk don t work (for the market) LSS trades Monolines Use of bilateral CVA Proper ways of reducing counterparty risk are not cheap or easy Strong collateral requirements Hedging Central clearing may offer some benefits but is not a magic solution Jon Gregory (jon@oftraining.com), Credit Risk Summit, 15 th October 2009 page 26