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Oracle Financial Services
Analytics Application-OFSAA




          Asset Liability Management


                        SATISH KUMAR L
                             CFA




                                         1
ALM in Banking.
   Master Maintenance
   Asset liability Management
ALM basically refers to the process by which an institution manages its balance sheet in order
to allow for alternative interest rate and liquidity scenarios.
    ALM-is a first step in the
    long-term strategic planning
    process.-Considered as                                              ALM is Appropriate for institutions
    planning function for                                                (Banks, finance companies, leasing
    intermediate term                                                   companies, insurance
                                                                        companies, and others)

                               ALM is concerned with strategic
                               Balance sheet management
                               Involving Managing Risk

     In a sense   The various
     aspects of balance sheet                       Management of risks caused
     management    deal  with                       by changes in the interest
     planning,                                      rates, Exchange rates and the
                                                    Liquidity position of the bank
     As well as direction and                 Measure and Monitor
     control of the levels, changes           risk, and provide
     and             mixes            of                                  ALM Is approach to Quantify
                                              suitable strategies for     these risks , that provides
     assets, liabilities, and capital         their management.           institutions with protection that
                                                                          makes credit risk, interest risk, and
                                                                          liquidity risk Acceptable.

 And--------The Role of Securitization---------                                                              3
The process will involve the following steps:
                       •Firstly, Review the interest rate structure and compare the same to the interest/product
                        pricing of both assets and liabilities.
    Interest rate.
      Foreign
                       •Secondly, Examine the loan and the investment portfolios in the light of the foreign
  exchange/Liqui        exchange risk and liquidity risk that might arise.
     dity risk



                       •Thirdly, examine the probability of the credit risk and contingency risk that may
  Credit/contingency    originate either due to rate fluctuations or otherwise and assess the quality of assets.
         Risk




                       •Finally, review the actual performance against the projections made and analyze the
                        reasons for any effect on the spreads.
  Actual performance




                     The ALM technique so designed to manage the various risks will primarily aim to stabilize the
                     short-term profits, long-term earnings and long run sustenance of the bank.

    *Credit risk: Risk describes the possibility in the repayment obligation by the borrowers of funds
    (delayed payment also facet of default risk)

    *Contingent risk :the off-balance sheet items such as guarantees,letter of credit ,underwriting Etc
    will give rise to the contingent risk. *                                                                         4
The enhanced level of importance of ALM has led to the change in the nature of
its functions.




                                   Micro-level-                 Price matching
 Macro-level-                                                    Basically aims to maintain
                                   The objective functions of
 ALM leads to the formulation                                   spreads by ensuring that the
                                   the ALM are two-fold.        deployment of liabilities will be
 of
                                                                at a rate higher than the costs.
 Critical Business Policies,
 Efficient allocation of capital   It aims at Profitability     Example : IRS
 and                               through price matching
                                                                Maturing matching

 Designing of products with                                     •Similarly, grouping the assets/liabilities
 appropriate         pricing       while ensuring liquidity      based on their Maturing profiles ensures
                                                                 liquidity.
 strategies.                       by means of maturity
                                   matching.                    •The liquidity gap is then assessed to
                                                                 identify the future financing
                                                                 requirements.

                                                                • Example : Liquidity GAP


                                                                                                              5
The most common target accounts in ALM of banks are:

           •Net Interest Income (NII):
            The impact of volatility on    •The market value
            the short-term profits is       of equity represents   •The ratio of the
            measured by NII.                the Long-term           shareholders funds
                                            profits of the bank.    to the total assets
           •NIM: A performance metric                               measures the shifts in
            examines the how successful    •The difference          the ratio of owned
            a firms investment decisions    between the market      funds to total funds.
            are compared to its Debt        value of assets and
            situations                      liabilities will be    •Stabilizing       this
                                            the target account.     account will generally
                                                                    come as a statutory
                                                                    requirement.
                                                                     Economic
                NIM/NII                     MVE                      Equity

NII: The difference between the revenue that is generated from the Banks assets & the
expenses associated with paying out liabilities is NII.NII is more sensitive(Volatile) to the
changes in interest rates.
NIM = -VE represents firm did not make an optimal decision =>the firm has los more
money due to interest expenses than was earned from investments
                                                                                             6
    The stress testing frame work included a wide
     range of Bank-specific and market (Systemic)           Played a important
     scenarios                                              role in :--
    Stress testing: It is a key risk management tool
     during periods of expansion, when innovation
     leads to new products that grow rapidly and for        • Feeding into capital
     which      limited    or  no     loss    data     is   and liquidity planning
     available(facilitating the development of risk         procedures;
     mitigation)
    Stress testing is an important risk management
     tool that is used by banks as part of their internal   • informing the setting
     risk management and, through the Basel II capital      of a banks’ risk -
     adequacy framework.
                                                            tolerance
    The Risk Committee also reviews the stress-
     testing framework as part of the Internal Capital
     Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP).
    ICAAP :Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment
     Process (ICAAP).
Asset Liability Management




           Interest Rate Risk   IRR-APPROACHES
                                GAP Analysis .
                                Duration GAP Analysis.
                                Simulation /Sensitivity Analysis.
                                VAR Analysis

                                Managing IRR: Hedging
                                with
           Liquidity Risk       Options, Futures, swaps




           Exchange Risk
• Interest rate risk arises when the income of the bank is sensitive to
the interest rate fluctuations.

•The banks results of operations are substantially dependent upon the
level of banks net interest margins.

• Interest rates are sensitive to many factors to influence the NII &
NIM. Including the RBI’S monetary Policies, domestic and international
economic and political conditions and other factors.

• Changes in interest rates could affect the interest rates charged on
interest-earning assets and the Interest rates paid on interest-bearing
liabilities in different ways



                                                                          9
    For each time bucket the GAP=interest rate sensitive assets (RSAs) --interest
     rate sensitive liabilities (RSLs).
    Gap Ratio = RSAs/ RSLs
    When interest rates change, the bank’s NII changes =>ΔNII = (RSAs - RSLs) x
     Δr
                    ΔNII = GAP x Δr.
    A zero GAP will be the best choice either if the bank is unable to speculate
     interest rates accurately or if its capacity to absorb risk is close to zero.
    With a zero GAP, the bank is fully protected against both increases and
     decreases in interest rates as its NII will not change in both cases.
    This model measures the direction and extent of asset-liability mismatch
     through a funding or maturity GAP (or, simply, GAP). Assets and liabilities are
     grouped in this method into time buckets according to maturity.(the maturates
     are same and then select the gap period , which can be any where between
     month to a year .

* Categorize :RSA &RSL are => requires balance sheet classification based on the rate sensitivity .
     Based on this banks should first able to forecast interest rate fluctuations .
Identify RSA,RSL with in the first forecast period .thus all assets /liabilites are subject to repricing with
     in the planning horizon are categorize RSA.,RSL’S


                                                                                                           10
   During a selected gap period, the RSG will be positive when the RSAs are
    more than the RSLs, negative when the RSLs are in excess of the
    RSAs, and zero when the RSAs and RSLs are equal.
   Maintain a positive gap when the interest rates are rising;
   Maintain a negative gap when the interest rates are on a decline
   GAP analysis examines the sensitivity of the market value of Financial
    institutions Net worth(MVE) to change in interest rates .


                                                                         11
   Duration Analysis studies the effect of rate fluctuation on the market value of
    the assets and liabilities and net interest margins (NIM), with the help of
    duration.
   It also provides an approximate measure of market value interest elasticity.
   Duration analysis begins by computing the individual duration of each asset
    and liability and weighting the individual durations by the percentage of the
    asset or liability in the balance sheet to obtain the combined asset and liability
    duration.
   DUR gap = DUR assets – K liabilities DUR liabilities
    Where, K liabilities = Percentage of assets funded by liabilities
   DGAP directly indicates the effect of interest rate changes on the net worth of
    the institution. The funding GAP technique matches cash flows by structuring
    the short-term maturity buckets.




                                                                                   12
How the price of a bond changes in response to the interest
          rates




   Duration is defined as the average life of a financial instrument.
   Duration : A measure of the sensitivity of the price of a fixed income instrument to a change in
    interest rates .
   Duration is proportional to the interest rate risk
   Convexity is a measure of the curvature of how the price of a bond changes as the interest rate
    changes. Specifically, duration can be formulated as the first derivative of the price function of the
    bond with respect to the interest rate in question, and the convexity as the second derivative.
   Duration Analysis : Price risk and the Reinvestment risk
   The larger the value of the duration, the more sensitive is the price of that asset or liability to changes
    in interest rates.
   Bonds with higher durations carry more risk &have higher price volatility .

                                                                                                          13
   Scenario analysis: static.
   The sensitivity of an asset/liability can be assessed
    by the quantum of increase/decrease( Various
    scenarios) in the value of the assets/liabilities of
    varying maturities due to the interest rate
    fluctuations.
   Various Scenario Analysis :Discrete (continuous)
    distribution.
   Example :2%,3%,4%.




                                                            14
   Simulation models help to introduce a dynamic element in the analysis of
    interest rate risk.
   These methods are used to simulate of variety different scenarios
    (Randomly-Distribution) for the portfolio of Target date
   Securities commonly used simulation techniques known as Monte Carlo –
    Methods , to value complex Derivatives and to measure risk .
   Simulation methods approximates the behavior of financial prices by using
    computer simulations to generate random price paths .
   What if scenarios,
                    The absolute level of interest rates shift.
                     There are nonparallel yield curve changes .
                     Marketing plans are under-or-over achieved .
                     Margins achieved in the past are not sustained/improved .
                     Bad debt and prepayment levels change in different interest rate
    scenarios .

(Parallel shift in the yield curve : changes in the yield for all maturities is same).
Non –parallel shift in the yield curve ……..>
                                                                                         15
High -Volatility
                                                                                Distribution
   VAR is the maximum potential loss in market
    value or income.
   VAR to be used in combination with Stress
    Testing
   Refers to the maximum expected loss that a            Possible range of values- Between ‘u’ &
                                                          sigma
    bank can suffer over a target horizon, given a
    certain confidence interval.
                                                                                    Low - Volatility
   Measuring the market risk of a portfolio of                                     Distribution
    assets and/or liabilities for which no historical
    data exists..
   Calculate the Net worth of the organization at
    any particular point of time so that it is possible
    to focus on long-term risk implications of
    decisions that have already been taken or that
    are going to be taken.




                                                                                                       16
Liquidity risk is the risk of being unable to raise
necessary funds (sufficient cash flows )from the
  market to meet operational and debt servicing
 requirements and to capitalize on opportunities
              for business expansion.




                        Asset Liability Management (ALM) can be defined as a
                        mechanism to address the liquidity risk faced by a Bank
                        due to a mismatch between assets and liabilities either
                              due to liquidity or changes in interest rates.




Liquidity is an
institution’s ability to                           Approaches :
meet its liabilities                          Fund management ….managing surplus &
either by borrowing or
converting assets.
                                                            Deficit



                                                                                  17
FX- risk is the exposure of an institution
   to the Adverse fluctuations((unanticipated
     change) in exchange rates may result
    in loss in value in terms To the institution

                                                                Approaches :
                                               Transactional exposure(cash flow exposure) :
Foreign exchange risk may                      FX exposure arises from daily foreign
arise from a variety of sources                currency dealing or trading activates.
such as foreign exchange
trading,           investments                 Translational exposure (Accounting Exposure) :
denominated       in     foreign
                                               arises form overall asset /liability
currencies and investments in
foreign companies, making                      infrastructure of both on/off Balance sheets
foreign     currency       loans
, buying foreign       currency                         VAR approach to risk associated with
securities or issuing foreign                           FX-exposures
currency -denominated debt
,foreign    currency        retail                     External approach:
accounts and retail cash                               Forward contracts
transactions and services,.
                                                       Options
                                                       Swaps

  ---------Currency gain/loss-----
                                                                                                18
Master Maintenance

    Dimensions Management
    Hierarchies
    Filters
    Rate Management
Dimensions-Dimensions are used to arrange(Stratify)
business data for processing and Reporting purposes.
OFSAA Is Seeded with 6–Key processing Dimensions
                                                               OU-Dimension



          Members-Each Dimension comprises of a list of     BU-1    BU-2      BU-3

          members who share common attributes or
          characteristic features.

                                                                              Head-
                                                                              count-
                                                                                32
               Attributes-Dimension attribute values are used to
               qualify dimension members. It provides for
               defining member characteristics.                               Curre
               used extensively in processing                                  ncy



                                                                                     20
   Dimensions are used to arrange business data for processing and
    reporting purposes.
   The General Ledger (GL) Dimension is used to store all GLs of the
    bank, in form of its members.
   GL Accounts used in the Financial Accounting systems of the
    organization, to store information of Profit and Loss and Balance Sheet
    items.
   Organizational Unit dimension stores all Org unit IDs of the bank, with
    their respective descriptions.
   An Organizational Unit is used as a segmentation and consolidating
    Reporting currency to Functional Currency.
   Financial element dimension stores all Financial Element IDs to be used
    in the Cash Flow Engine .
   Financial Element (FE) is used to distinguish business data based on its
    features.
   On an event date, OFSA computes the results of that event, the financial
    elements.
OFSAA supports 3 fundamentally different kinds of dimensions
Key Processing Dimensions:
    Are accessible as modeling dimensions for all of the OFSAA
    analytical engines.
    Are expressed as columns in nearly all of your business fact tables
     Support both attributes and hierarchies..
Standard Dimensions: Standard dimensions may support attributes
    and/or hierarchies depending on how they are configured, but are
    not used as processing dimensions.
Simple Dimensions(Code dimensions,)Simple dimensions are "lists of
    values" that support neither attributes nor hierarchies.
Total 150 simple dimensions .
   Hierarchies may be used to provide sophisticated
    stratification for either processing or reporting purposes.
   For example, an organizational hierarchy might start with a
    Division level containing Western Region, Eastern
    Region, and Southern Region;
   the next level down within the hierarchy might be state or
    county.
   A product hierarchy might begin with branches for Asset vs.
    Liability vs. Service products; under the Asset branch, you
    might define additional Overview of OFSAA Infrastructure
    branches for Mortgage Lending, Commercial
    Lending, Consumer Lending, etc.
   Hierarchies are used extensively in OFSAA models to
    assign methods to products and to support allocation
    methodologies.
FSI_D                                OFSAA-
                                         Application                            Process




                     Data-Element                            Hierarchy


Eliminate specified data /values at instrument   Eliminate specified data /values at Hierarchy
Level(FSI_D/Entity) before processing            level( product/organization) before
                                                 processing. Select any where in the
                                                 hierarchy

  GROUP: Combination of Data-                    Hierarchy filters are widely used in cost
       Element filters                           allocation and segmentation rules
   Group Filters may be used to combine multiple Data
    Element Filters
   Example:
    Data Element Filter #1 filtered on mortgage
    balances greater than 100,000
   Data Element Filter #2 filtered on current mortgage
    interest rates greater than 6%,
   you could construct a Group Filter to utilize both
    Data Filters.
   In this case, the resulting Group Filter would
    constrain your data selection to mortgage
    balances greater than 100,000 AND current
    mortgage interest rates greater than 6%.
Rate Management –Interest Rate




                                 27
Based on yield curve
    The yield curve describes the relationship between a
                                                                   ,FI’s Can be issued
     particular redemption yield and a bond’s maturity.            at Assets can be
     (Plotting the yields of bonds along the term structure will   issued at higher
     give us our yield curve)                                      maturity and
                                                                   liabilities issued at
    Yield curve usually plotted on Government –securities.
                                                                   lower maturity.

    It is important that only bonds from the same class of
     issuer or with the same degree of liquidity be used when
     plotting the yield curve.

    The yield curve is used as a benchmark for other debt in
     the market, such as mortgage rates or bank lending
     rates.

    The curve is also used to predict changes in economic
     output and growth, and it helps to give an idea of future
     interest rate change


    Current yield =coupon interest /Market price
    Boot strapping :implied future rates, known as implied forward
        rates, or simply forward rates, can be derived from a given spot
        yield curve boot-strapping.)
       Zero –coupon yield curve :The zero-coupon (or spot) yield curve
        plots zero-coupon yields (or spot yields) against term to maturity
       YTM-yield curve : The curve itself is constructed by plotting the
        yield to maturity against the term to maturity for a group of bonds of
        the same class.


Yield curve points are taken from zero coupon Bonds
Zero –coupon bond : The holder of a zero-coupon bond only receives the Face value of the
bond at maturity. A zero-coupon bond does not pay Coupons or interest payments, to the
bondholder .

YTM-Cash outflow(Equal to the price of the bond) =cash inflows(periodic interest coupon
are received on maturity) +Redemption Value (received on final maturity
Vasicek : interest rates are dependent on
  market(short term interest ) & Economic activity.

Hull & white : Deals with future interest rates .

Ho-Lee: Interest rates which relates the bond to
  yield curve .
         the current yield curve is to be fixed .
   Hybrid yield curves are built up from either one or more
    standard yield curves
   A Spread hybrid yield curve is defined as the difference between
    two standard yield curves. The "spread" type of hybrid yield curve
    may be useful in establishing liquidity risk or basis risk yield
    curves.
   Merged hybrid yield curves represent a blending of two or more
    underlying yield curves.
   In constructing a "merged" type of hybrid yield curve, you specify
    the percentage weighting applicable to each of the underlying
    standard hybrid yield curves.
   Moving average hybrid yield curves represent moving average
    data of a single underlying standard yield curve.
    These curves are typically used in Funds Transfer Pricing.
Functional currency
                                                      Reporting currency (consolidated)
                                                      Exchange RATE




A foreign exchange rate is the price at which one currency can be exchanged for another
currency
Spot :Involves the immediate exchange of currencies at the current (spot ) exchange rate .
Forward Rate :is the exchange of currencies at a specified (or forward exchange rate ) over a specified
date in the future .                                                                                 32
OFSAA Rate Management provides a comprehensive list of 179 ISO-defined
currencies;
  Reporting Currency
  A reporting currency is an active currency to which
  balances in other currencies may be Consolidated in
  order to facilitate reporting.
  Functional Currency:
  Balances in reporting currencies may be, in                    Reporting
  turn, consolidated to the functional currency.                 currency
  The functional currency is both an active currency and
  a reporting currency.
  Note: At the time of installation, Rate Management
  requires the installer to designate a Functional
  currency for the organization.                      function    function   function
  In our LAB …the functional currency: USD.              al          al         al
  Currency Exchange rates:
  In order to establish setup the a process of currency
  exchange rate , first we define the from currency
  (fixed or pegged ) then we must supply as a To
  currency (float ) value .
                                                                                33
Floating rate
Fixed rate
Base Currency
Reporting currency
Functional currency
Default currency
Non-Currency Basis-
Seeded currencies-179



                 If status will be active – then
                 Reporting currency will be
                 active (asking –Yes/No)
As     of Date -All        ALM
      processes refer this date
      at run time to determine
      the data to include in the
      process.

The      date    that  the
      extracted       data
      represents.

Origination Date :The date of
    the origination for the
    transaction account. This
    day may be in the future.
    or the past




                             36
•Defining Time Buckets are mandatory for Statutory Reporting purpose.
(Time buckets allow you to specify the time periods used for storing and reporting
results.)
•Time Bucket rules allow users to create the various time bucket definitions used for
computing and outputting aggregated cash flows.
•Time Bucket determines granularity of cash flow output and can be set at any
frequency through a combination of daily, monthly and yearly buckets.




                                                                                    37
•It is a modeling                               •
                             bucket set according                           • Interest Rate GAP                                   •Liquidity        GAP
                             future start dates.                              Buckets allow you to                                 Buckets are similar to
Income Simulation Buckets




                                                                              define Interest Rate GAP




                                                                                                          Liquidity GAP Buckets
                                                     Interest GAP Buckets
                                                                                                                                   Interest Rate GAP
                                                                              buckets.
                            •Income Simulation                                                                                     buckets.
                             Bucket definitions                             • Dynamic Start Date
                             are referenced by all                            allows definition of                                •The key difference is
                             bucket based forecast                            forward start dates for                              that liquidity bucket
                             business rules,                                  computing dynamic                                    impact      only    the
                                                                              market valuations.
                                                                                                                                   liquidity        runoff
                            •including Forecast                                                                                    financial elements.
                                                                            • The Dynamic Start Date
                             Rates, Forecast                                  allows exercise of
                             Balances, Pricing                                Amortization of existing                            •The Dynamic Start
                             Margins and                                      business and any new                                 Dates allow forecast
                             Maturity Mix rules                               business assumptions.                                liquidity position as of
                             and also by ALM                                                                                       some future date,
                             Deterministic                                  • Income Simulation
                                                                              Buckets are set up before
                             Processes during                                 defining Interest Rate                              •Considering relevant
                             ALM engine                                       GAP Buckets.                                         assumptions,
                             processing.
                                                                                                                                  •includingAmortizatio
                                                                                                                                   n,prepayments,Early
                                                                                                                                   withdrawals(early
                                                                                                                                   redemptions)and
                                                                                                                                   rollovers.
                                                                                                                                                          38
  Product characteristic rules define payment, pricing and repricing
   characteristics for new business.
  They can used to specify calculation attributes for both existing
   accounts and new business.
Product Profiles :
  Product Characteristic setup can be a time consuming process with
   more than 40 attributes, so Product Profiles allows to pre-define and
   save common product definitions and reference these definitions
   while defining Product Characteristic assumptions.
  Save common default values for the majority of required fields
The following Product Profiles are seeded during installation:
  Bond – Adjustable Rate, Bond – Fixed Rate, Credit Card, Discount
   Instrument, Lease, Loan – Adjustable Rate, Loan – Fixed Rate, Loan
   – Floating Rate, Loan – Negative Amortization, Savings, Term
   Deposit

                                                                     39
   Amortization : Paying off Debt in regular installments over a period of Time .
   Interest in arrears : Interest on loan which is due to be paid at the maturity date rather
    than periodically during the life of the loan . The interest leading up to the due date is
    payable but not yet paid .
   Interest in advance : borrowers can prepay the next years interest and claim it as a
    deduction when filing Taxes .
   Balloon payment : a type of loan which Is not fully amortized over its term . a balloon
    payment is required at the end of the term to repay the remaining principal of the loan .
    Negative Amortization: an increase in the principal balance of a loan caused by making
    payments that fail to cover the interest due
    Example : the periodic interest payment loan is 500,and a 400 payment may be paid
    contractually made .so remaining 100 is added to the Principal balance of the loan .
   OAS :is a discounting factor used for Market value & VAR (stochastic process )
   Currency Exchange gain/loss:
   Model with Gross rates :
   Gross rates : used for prepayments & Amortization
   Net rates : used for income simulation &calculated for retained earnings in the auto
    balancing process
To Value and Estimate the interest rate risk of both
the MBS and ABS .




                                                  42
    Mortgage: a mortgage is a loan secured by collateral of some of
     specified real estate property which obliges the borrower to make a
     series of payments.
     Mortgage is a contract , in which borrowers property is pledged as
     security for a loan , which is to be repaid on Installment Basis.
    (The mortgage gives the lender the right if the borrower defaults to
     ―foreclose ― on the loan and seize of the property in order to ensure
     that the debt is paid off )
    The interest rate on the mortgage loan is called the mortgage rate or
     contract rate.
    Mortgage backed securities: MBS are backed by a pool of
     traditional residential mortgage loans called MBS .
    Asset Backed securities: Securities backed by loans other than
     traditional residential mortgage loans and backed by receivables are
     referred as ABS.

                                                                         43
44
Patterns User defined patterns allow you to define custom
            repayment patterns for products in a portfolio

       Payment patterns:
 Differ in terms of how they                   Repricing Patterns:
                                         Define a series of Repricing      Behavior Patterns:
address              payment
                                         patterns and events that          The behavior patterns differ
schedules, which determine
                                         describe the interest rate        in terms of how they allow
whether the payment events
                                         adjustment      characteristics   you to categorize cash flows
constituting the pattern are
                                         over the life of a cash flow      based on the specific
determined by calendar dates
                                         instrument.                       behavior type being modeled
or periods.
   Absolute:
   Payment             characteristics                                      Non –Maturity: commonly used for
   scheduled on specific calendar                                           deposit products like checking, savings
   dates.                                                                   and money market accounts as well as for
   Example:                 seasonal                                        credit card accounts.
   schedule, such as agricultural or
   construction loans.                           Absolute                   These account types are similar in that
                                                                            they do not have contractual cash flows
   Relative:           characteristics       :Seasonal Pattern              because customers have the option to
                                                                            deposit or withdraw any amount at any
   scheduled for certain periods of
   time.                                         Relative :                 time (up to any established limits).

   Example:
   Modeling      instruments     with
                                              Graduated Rate                Non Performing Behavior Patterns:
                                                                            commonly used for balances that are
   irregular payment frequencies.               Mortgage.                   classified as Non-Earning assets(Non
                                                                            Performing Assets (NPA’s) ).

                                                                            Devolvement and Recovery Behavior
   Split: with both absolute and
                                                                            Patterns:
   relative payment events.
                                                                            commonly used for estimating cash flows
                                                                            associated with Letters of Credit and
   Example :                                                                Guarantees.
   multiple sets of payment patterns                                        These product types are typically
   under a single amortization code                                         categorized as off balance sheet accounts.

                                                                                                                 45
   Example of a loan that follows a seasonal payment
    pattern, in which the payment patterns for
    January, February and March are scheduled for interest-
    only payments.

   As revenues for the customer increase, the payment
    amount also increases. Therefore, the payments for
    April and May are 80% of the original payment, and
    June through September is 100% of the original
    payment.
   The payment decreases as the production season
    slows. The payment for October is decreased to 80% of
    the original payment, and the payments for November
    and December are decreased again to 50% of the
    original payment
Graduated
Mortgages :EMI’s
start at low level
and rise for a no
of years & then
become equal
after specified no
of years


Traditional
Mortgages
:Repaid in equal
monthly
installments of
both principal &
Interest.
Spot IRC




Spot Input       Forecast –Original Term   Forecast –Remaining Term
                                                                  48
49
Discount Method rules allow users to define the method for discounting projected
cash flows for market value and duration calculation purposes.

The methodologies contained in the Discount Method rules are referenced by the
Static Deterministic and Dynamic Deterministic ALM Processes.



   Spot Input           Yield curve                         Forecasted Yield curve

                        Spot Interest Rate                                  Forecast
                                                      Forecast
                        Code(SPOT IRC):                                    (Remaining
                                                   (Original Term):
                                                                             Term)
                       Discounts each cash
    Spot Input          flow period by the           Discounts each
  (single rate):       equivalent term rate        cash flow period by    : Discounts each
                                                     the forecasted      cash flow period by
  Discounts all        on the base yield curve      value of the point      the forecasted
  cash flows by                chosen               on the yield curve    value of the point
    the same                                                              on the yield curve
                      (the yield curve as of the    corresponding to      corresponding to
   Input Rate .         start date selected in       each transaction    the remaining term
                        your ALM Application
                                                     record's original   (Term from the As-
                            Preferences).
                                                   term(Original Date)   of –date)until each
                                                                              cash flow.


                                                                                               50
   Total 12 months a period.
       Forecasted –Yield curve




    3months                Remaining term
                             9-months




              As-of-data
Prepayments




              52
   Loan profile of a bank will generally in long term in nature . Large
    volume of funds will be blocked in project financing and asset financing
    activities of the Institution .
   Securitization is a an effective way to release the funds for further
    investments .
   Securitization denotes process of selling assets by the person holding it
    to an intermediary , who in turn will break such assets in to marketable
    securities .
   In securitization future cash flows from advances (like mortgages ) made
    by Bank are repackaged in to negotiable certificates and issued to the
    investors .
   This arrangement induces the liquidity to the highly liquid assets .
   In the process of securitization also reduces the Interest rate risk
    , associated to the rate fluctuation .
   Mortgage pass through security :is a security created when 1 or more
    holders of mortgages form a collection (pool) of mortgages and sell
    shares or participation certifications in the pool ( a pool may consist of
    several thousand or only a few mortgages) . When a mortgage is included
    in a pool of mortgages that is used as collateral for a mortgage pass
    through security , the mortgage is to be securitized .                   53
54
55
    Prepayment: A payment made in excess of monthly mortgage payment
     is called prepayment .
    Home owners do payoff all (entire outstanding balance) or part (partial
     pay down of Mortgage Balance) of their mortgage balance prior to the
     date.
    Prepayment Risk: One of the major business risks faced by financial
     institutions engaged in the business of lending is prepayment risk.
     Prepayments, the amount and the timing of cash flows from a mortgagee
     loan are not known with certainty.
    Borrowers might choose the Repay part or all of their loan obligations
     before the scheduled date. .
    Prepayment –Methods : we cannot estimate the prepayment as in the
     same monthly EMI’S .
    So project a cash flow , is to make some assumption about the
     prepayment rate over the life of the underlying mortgage pool .




                                                                           56
Constant Prepayment Method: Calculates the prepayment amount as a flat percentage of
    the current balance.
   Conditional Prepayment Rate (CPR)
    CPR is a annual prepayment rate.
   To estimate monthly prepayments, the CPR must be converted in to a monthly
    prepayment rate, commonly referred to as the Single monthly mortality Rate (SMM)
                   SMM= 1-(1-CPR)^1/12.
Public Securities Association Standard(PSA)–Method: expressed as monthly series of
    CPR’s. Assumes Prepayments are low for a newly originated mortgaged balance and
    then will speed up as the mortgages become seasoned.
Arctangent Calculation Method: Analyze the prepayment behavior.
The Arctangent Calculation method uses the Arctangent mathematical function to describe
    the relationship between prepayment rates and spreads (coupon rate less market rate).
Specifically: CPRt = k1 - (k2 * ATAN(k3 * (-Ct/Mt + k4)))
where CPRt = annual prepayment rate in period t
           Ct = coupon in period t
           Mt = market rate in period t
           k1 - k4 = user defined coefficients


                                                                                     57
The arctangent formula describes the
                                                 relationship between prepayments and
                                                 the ratio of coupon rate to market rate.




For 100% PSA


1)   0.2% CPR =for the first month.
2)   Increased by 0.2%peryear per month
     for the next 30 months ..until it reaches
     0.6%
3)   A 6% CPR for the remaining months
   Curtailment: The prepayment could be the pay-off the entire
    outstanding balance or a partial pay down of the mortgage
    balance. When the pre -payment is not for the entire outstanding
    balance it is called curtailment .
   Refinance: Refinancing is the tendency of the borrower to pre-
    close a costly loan and see the property refinanced with a cheaper
    loan .
    Borrowers refinance for several reasons: to reduce the rate, reduce
    payments, reduce risk of future rate increases, and raise cash.
   Seasonality: Seasonality pattern is related to activity in the
    primary housing market, with home buying activity increasing in
    the spring, and gradually reaching a peak in the late summer.
    Home buying activity declines in the fall and winter.
   Mirroring this activity are prepayments that results from the
    turnover of housing as home buyers sell their existing homes and
    purchase new ones.
                                                                       59
   Early Redemption(Early withdrawal): The Repurchase of a bond
    by the issuer before it matures.
   Early redemption fees are often charged in the early years of
    many fixed rate ,capped rate or cash back mortgages, when they
    are repaid early.
   If you are working with deposit products, it is possible to define
    Early Redemption assumptions within the Prepayment Rule.




                                                                     60
   Conditional Assumptions can be applied only on detailed accounts (data stored
    in the Instrument Tables) and reference only the Cash Flow and Dimension
    columns that are part of the Instrument Tables. Conditional Assumptions are
    ignored when processing forecast balances.
   You can define prepayment methodologies using IF-THEN-ELSE logic based on
    the underlying characteristics of your financial instruments, such as
    dates, rates, balances, and code values.




                                                                           61
Currency Forecasting-Forward rates
Interest Rate Forecasting

Rate shock Analysis




                                     62
   Use currency exchange rate forecasts to account for
    the effects of currency fluctuations on
    income(RSA,RSL ‘s for change in NII)
   Use interest rate forecasts to project cash
    flows, including pricing new business, re-pricing
    existing business, calculating prepayments, and
    determining discount methods.
   Use Economic Indicator forecasts to include in
    behavioral modeling and scenario/stress analysis.
   Scenarios : You can also set minimum rates (or
    floors) on any rule created for Currency, Interest Rate.
    For example, if you want to run a -200bp rate
    scenario, with short term rates <2%, you can set the
    minimum rate to floor at 0%, although negative rates
    are allowed if desired.
For interest code –
interpolation methods
Forecast Balances:                          Rate-Volume Modeling-Forecast                  Rate Dependency Patterns:
To discusses modeling of new business                  Balances:       Customer demand for new
                                                                                                      Rate Dependency Patterns allow
activity through the Forecast Balance                                                                 you to establish relationships
                                                       products often depends on interest rates or
                                                                                                      between the level of interest
rules.                                                 other variables such as macro-economic
                                                                                                      rates, Rate spreads and ALM
                                                       drivers.
                                                        You can model this behavior by selecting a
                                                       Rate—Dependency assumption.                    forecast assumption rules   .
    Objective :Tailor the new business
    assumptions to meet your expectations of
    future originations, including the timing of
    new business and the effect of interest
    rates on new business amounts.




                                                                                    Pricing Margin: allow users to define pricing
                                                                                        margins (or spreads) for your products.

                                                                                Pricing margins work together with a underlying base
                                                                               interest rate curve to determine note rate pricing for
                                                                               new business volumes defined through Forecast
      Volume Detail                  Maturity Mix: Allow you to                Balance rules.
        Growth :                     Define the Term distribution
  Percentage of growth               of new business added
      % with in each                 during each forecast period.
     Modeling Bucket                 You create Maturity Mix rules
   (Income simulation                to define the maturity and
         Bucket).                    amortization term for new
               .                     business volumes. .
                                                                                                                                      65
Rate-Level Dependent                                            Rate-Spread Dependent




                    Interpolation

                      Range

                                                                                   Rate Lag: Period by which
                                                                                   repricing lags the current
                                                                                   interest rate changes.




Rate Lag :Defined for New Business Assumptions and Depends on the Timing
Options
Rate Tiers :Defined for Spread
67
Rate -Tiers
                     Base-
                    Interes
                        t                         Rate -Tiers
                                         Modeling Interest Rates:at above or below Market Interest codes
                                         Using with Income simulation Buckets .
                                         Example : 25 Bp above the Market yield curve


                                         Gross Margin :Used for Pre-payment &Amortization
                                         Net Margin :Retained Earnings in the Auto Balancing Process




Product characteristics : All Business: Enable Model with gross rate .
New Business : Define Payment attributes
                  Net margin flag
                                 Floating Net Rate
                                  Fixed Net rate
ALL business :Enable :Model
                                                                                   with Gross rate
                            Product characteristics-Define
                             New Business assumptions                           New Business : define
                                                                                 Payment attributes :
                                                                                   Net margin Flag
                                                                                   Float Net rate .
                                                                                    Fixed Net arte
                            Select Product and currency

                              Rate dependency patterns-
                                     Rate TIERS

                                   Pricing margins-
                                 Modeling Interest rates


            Net Margin                                        Gross Margin

Net margin : Net Rate is affected by setting the net margin
flag in product char rule .                                       Gross margin = Gross rate (defined in
Net margin is set to fixed rate : Then net margin = Rate          product characteristic rule ) +Added
( Interest -code ) +Net margin flag specified .                   Interest (Defined in New Business)
Net margin is set to fixed rate :Then Net Margin= Rate (
Net )
                                                                                                           69
70
Rate -Tiers
         Base-
        Interest
                                   Rate -Tiers
                                                 Income Simulation Buckets

                                                 Start Buckets                          Maturity Date
                                                 (Min value)
                                                                              MM
                                                                              (Modeli
                                                                              ng Per
                                                                              bucket)   Amortization
                                                 End Buckets                              Date
                                                 Max value
                                                    New Business Assumption




                                            Rate-Lag
                   Note :Amortization term should always be greater than or equal to
Dynamic ALM        maturity term .
Example : Mortgage originations may be divided in to

   25%----- 5 year term(Maturity ) –--- 30 year
    Amortization

   25% ----- 7 year term ---- 30 year Amortization.

 50% -----30 year term ----- 30 year amortization .
You attach the set of maturity assumptions to apply
  all new business volumes with in a dynamic
  ALM.


                                                       72
Rate -Tiers
                       Base-
                      Interes
                          t                            Rate -Tiers

                                                                     New Business Timing Options:

                                                                     Distributed :Result reach an expected average balance in Between
                                                                     beginning and Ending balance .(Roll-Over 3 Methods are Applied )

                                                                     At Bucket End: generate result at the End of the Modeling bucket .
                                                                     result in irregular average balances & Interest accruals over the bucket
                                                                     Rate lag defined for New business assumptions and depends on
                                                                     Timing of options

                                                                         New Business Assumptions with Volume
                                                                                   Detail(growth%)




                                                                   Rate-Lag
If New Business option uses
1) Uses forecast interest rates (from Rate tires )- as of date with in the current modeling bucket (term )
    less the Rate lag .
2) End of the bucket term uses - the look up uses the last day of the bucket less the rate lag .
3) For all other cases the mid point of the bucket less the rate lag .
74
methods defines at Each Modeling Bucket

   No-New           New-Add-
                                         Target                  Roll-over
   Business         Business


Forecast –Zero   Exact Amt               Average                   Roll-Over
change in        (Absolute) of
Business         New Business           Expected Average
                                                                   Reinvestment
                                                                   (Extension) of
                                        Balance per Modeling
                 Is Added.              Bucket
                                                                   Principal of an
                                                                   Existing Account.

                                                                   Roll-over
                                            End                    with New -
                                                                      Add
                                        Total Expected Balance
                                                                   Reinvestment of Existing
                                        by the End of the
                                                                   A/C Plus Expectation of
                                        Modeling Bucket
                                                                   New Business Amount


                                         Growth                     Growth
                                        Expected Percentage      Both Roll-Over
                                        change in the over a     Assumptions & Overall
                                        Modeling Bucket          Growth Percentage
                                        (X2-X1/X1)*100           Assumptions
   Percentage of growth % with in each Modeling
    Bucket (Income simulation Bucket).
   you select the Range of modeling buckets and
    input balance or percentage assumptions for
    each modeling bucket within this bucket range
Derivatives are used to minimize Interest Rate Risk by using hedging or speculation.


With respect to the ALM process, options can be used for reducing risk and enhancing yield.

Call option strategies are profitable in bullish(if the market rallies ) interest rate scenarios with the maximum loss restricted
to the upfront premium.

Put options can be used to provide insurance against price declines, with limited risk if the opposite occurs.




 A futures contract is an agreement between a buyer and seller to exchange a fixed quantity of a financial asset at an
 agreed price on a specified date.

 Interest rate futures (IRF) can be used to control the risk associated asset liability GAP




 Interest rate swaps (IRS) represent a contractual agreement between a financial institution and a counterparty to
 exchange cash flows at periodic intervals, based on a notional amount.

 By arranging for another party to assume its interest payments, a bank can put in place such a hedge.
 Financial institutions can use such swaps to synthetically convert floating rate liabilities to fixed rate liabilities.

 Example :In case of a falling interest rate scenario, prepayment will increase.
78
   With the Transaction Strategy rules you can Test the impact of various
    hedging strategies that are integrated with Basic scenario modeling
    assumptions.

   Hedging :Try to minimize Risk (IRR/ER), not bothered about profits.

   Arbitration :Generate profits –Is a process of where you try to take
    the advantage of market discrepancies (look profits by minimize risk
    )

   These transaction strategies will be used to measured the interest
    rate risk using derivative instruments like Futures ,options, Forward
    contracts and swaps .


                                                                     79
Interest rate Futures




                  80
  A futures contract is a type of derivative instrument, or financial
   contract, in which two parties agree to transact a set of financial
   instruments or physical commodities for future delivery at a
   particular price.
  If you buy a futures contract, you are basically agreeing to buy
   something that a seller has not yet produced for a set price.
  The futures market is extremely Liquid ,risky and complex by
   nature.
Futures Position :
  A futures contract is an agreement between two parties:
  A short position - the party who agrees to deliver a commodity .
   A long position - the party who agrees to receive a commodity.
  The profits and losses of a futures contract depend on the daily
   movements of the market for that contract and are calculated on a
   daily basis

                                                                     81
   Futures can be used either to hedge or to speculate on the price
    movement of the underlying asset.
Currency Futures:
   A transferable futures contract that specifies the price at which a
    currency can be bought or sold at a future date.
   Currency future contracts allow investors to hedge against foreign
    exchange risk.
Interest rate futures :
   A futures contract with an underlying instrument that pays interest.
   An interest rate future is a contract between the buyer and
    seller agreeing to the future delivery of any interest-bearing asset.
   The interest rate future(IRF) allows the buyer and seller to lock in
    the price of the interest-bearing asset for a future date.



                                                                        82
Profitability




This financial contract gives a
right to its holder to enter into a
trade at or before a future
specified date.




                                      83
An option is a right to buy or sell an underlying asset at a future date at an agreed price.
A financial derivative that represents a contract sold by one party (option writer) to another
party (option holder).

                                                                Call Option :An option contract is
                                                                called a ‘call option’, if the writer
                                                                gives the buyer of the option the
                                                                right to purchase from him the
                                                                underlying asset.

                                                                Put Option :An option contract is
                                                                said to be a ‘put option,’ if the writer
                                                                gives the buyer of the option the
                                                                right to sell the underlying asset.

                                                                Exercise Date :The date at which
                                                                the contract matures.

                                                                Strike Price(Exercise Price) :At
                                                                the time of entering into the
                                                                contract, the parties agree upon a
                                                                price at which the underlying asset
                                                                may be bought or sold.



                                                                                                    84
   American options :An options, can be exercised on any
    day during the expiration period are called American
    options.
   European options :can be exercised only on the last
    day(always) of the expiration period.
   Bermuda option : A type of exotic option that can be
    exercised only on predetermined dates, typically every
    month.
    Bermuda options are a combination of American and
    European options. Bermuda options are exercisable at
    the date of expiration, and on certain specified dates that
    occur between the purchase date and the date of
    expiration.

                                                             85
   At-the-money: Exercise price is equal to the current spot price

   In-the-money:
   Call option : s>k strike price is below the current spot price of the underlying
    asset;
    Put option : k>s The strike price is above the current spot price of the underlying
    asset.

   Out-of-the-money:
   Call option : k>s the strike price is above the spot price of the underlying asset
   Put option : s>k the strike price is below the current spot price of the underlying
    asset. The buyer makes a loss if he exercises the option out-of-the-money.

   Position Limit: The maximum number of options contracts per investor.
   Exercise Limit: The maximum number of contracts that can be exercised per
    investor.




                                                                                           86
     Both are used in Montecarlo analytics.


                                                                                 FLOOR
                        CAP




 If interest rates rise above the agreed cap rate then   A floor is an agreement where the seller agrees
the seller pays the difference between the cap rate      to compensate the buyer if interest rates fall
and the interest rate to the purchaser.                  below the agreed upon floor rate.

 A cap is usually bought to hedge against a rise in
interest rates and yet is not a part of the loan          It is similar to a cap, but ensures that if the
agreement and may be bought from a completely            interest rate falls below a certain agreed floor
different bank/writer.                                   limit, the floor limit interest rate will be paid
   Intrinsic Value :is the value of the profits that are
    likely from the option.
   The Intrinsic Value is also the value of an option
    takes when it is in-the-money.
    For a call it is max (0, S – k)
   For a put it is max (0, k – S)
    where S and k are spot price and strike price of
    the underlying asset respectively.
     Time Value
   The difference between the option premium and
    the intrinsic value.

                                                       88
Interest rate swaps
                                            Currency swaps
                                            Basis swap
                                            Forward rate swaps


Swap :Refers to the simultaneous purchase and sale of currency(at agreed
exchanged rate ) for different maturities or vice versa
                                                                     89
   There are two parties to a swap transaction, fixed
    rate payer/receiver and floating rate receiver/payer.

   A fixed rate payer is the provider of floating rate
    funds and
     Hence the purchasers(Buyer ) of the swap lose
    when interest rate falls and gain when interest rate
    rises.

   A floating rate payer is the provider of fixed rate
    funds and
     Hence the seller of the swap loses when interest
    rate rises and gains when interest rate falls

                                                        90
    Plain Vanilla or coupon or Generic Swap:
    The plain vanilla swaps are those swaps where fixed rate obligations are exchanged for floating
    rate obligations over a specific period of time on a notional principal
   Basis Swap: A swap in which a stream of floating interest rates are exchanged for another
    stream of floating interest rates, is known as basis swap
   Interest rate swap :
     An interest rate swap is defined as an agreement between two or more parties who agree to
    exchange interest payments over a specific time period on agreed terms. The interest rates
    agreed may be fixed or floating.
   currency swap
     A currency swap is a contract involving exchange of interest payments on a loan in one currency
    for fixed or floating interest payments on equivalent loan in a different currency. Currency swaps
    may or may not involve initial exchange of principal.
     A plain vanilla currency swap is a fixed-fixed currency swap in which each party pays a fixed
    payment on the loan taken by them
   Forward Swaps
     Forward swaps are those swaps in which the commencement date is set as a future date.
    Thus, it helps in locking the swap rates and use them later as and when needed. Forward swaps
    are also known as deferred swaps .
   Amortizing Swaps
    If the interest rates are fairly stable then the floating payments are also reduced over time. This
    swap is particularly useful if a swap is undertaken to manage the risk arising from mortgage
    loans.

                                                                                                    91
   An interest rate swap (IRS) is a contract that
    exchanges interest payments between two
    differently indexed legs, of which one is usually
    fixed whereas the other one is floating. When
    the fixed leg is paid and the floating leg is
    received the interest rate swap is termed payer
    IRS and in the other case receiver IRS.
   Stochastic Rate index :The purpose of the Stochastic Rate
    Indexing Rule is to establish relationships between
    a risk-free Interest Rate Code (IRCs) and other interest rate codes
    or Indexes used for re-pricing existing business and pricing new
    business.
    Example of non risk free (dependent) curves are: LIBOR ,Prime
    rate
   The Stochastic Rate Indexing rule is a required assumption
    rule, that you select within a Stochastic ALM Process to calculate
    Value at Risk and Earnings at Risk.




                                                                    93
   Static Analysis is the fundamental platform on
    which the ALM function of the Bank is built.

   It is generally observed that a large number of
    Banks that offer the conventional banking products
    are able to address their considerations of
    adequate liquidity and sources of short term funds
    with the Static ALM analysis.

   Banks are able to fine tune any assumptions in
    order to meet their strategic objectives.


                                                     94
   Dynamic ALM: is practiced by Banks where
    the market environment is extremely active and
    very competitive and often require the bank to
    realign their business strategies.
   It is also useful when the complexity of
    operations is high.
   Accurate evaluation of current exposures of
    asset and liability portfolios to interest rate risk.
   Changes in multiple target variables such as
    net interest income, capital adequacy, and
    liquidity .
   Future gaps

                                                        95
Static               Dynamic             Deterministic
                                                               Stochastic
  (Present           (New Business        (Scenario/sensiti
                                                              (Simulation)
  Business)           Assumptions)              vity)

Balance–
sheets       are
maintained    at       Analysis for          Various         Monte carlo
same level .         Projected B/Sheet.                       simulation.
                                             Scenario
                        (Forecasted
(Existing                Business            Analysis
                        Projections).      Ex:2%,3%,4%          Simulate
Business
                      Assumptions                              variety of
   Positions
(OFSA Staging
                       which can be
                                              Discrete         scenarios.
                        created and
Area)                managed in OFSA       (uniform/conti
                            ALM                nuous)
Basic analysis        ->Information        distribution.      Random-
(output is limited      about Future                          Distribution.
to the existing           business
B/sheet).                  Plans .
OFSAA Processing
Source                               Instrument
Systems         ETL - OWB                             OFSAA
                                       Tables
                                                     Application


    Loans
                               FSI_D_LOAN_CONTRACT
                                         S

    Term                       FSI_D_TERM_DEPOSITS

   Deposits     Extraction         FSI_D_CASA         OFSAA uses
                                FSI_D_INVESTMENTS    the Instrument
                                                       tables and
               Transformatio   FSI_D_CREDIT_CARDS
    CASA                                             configurations
                     n          FSI_D_CREDIT_LINES
                                                        done and
                                FSI_D_DERIVATIVES    generates the
                                                          result
                 Loading           FSI_D_SWAPS
   Treasury                    FSI_D_FX_CONTRACTS

                                      etc.
    Credit
    Cards
OFSAA generates cash flows at the individual instrument level. Each individual instrument record
processed, generates a unique set of cash flows as defined by that instrument record’s product
characteristics.

     Source-                              ETL-OWB                                                              OFSAA-
                                               (Mapping )                          Instrument                 Application
     Systems                                    Extraction
                                             Transformation                          Tables                ( OFSAA uses the Instrument
  (CBS/Treasury)                                 Loading
                                                                                                         tables and configurations done
                                                                                                             and generates the result)




    Loans
                                                      Data staging Area
                                                                                                         FSI_D_LOAN_CONTRAC
                                                                                                                  TS
    Term
   Deposits                                                                   OFSAA-                     FSI_D_TERM_DEPOSIT
                                                                                                                  S
                source-Data             Transformation/Look up                 Mirror
                                                                                                               FSI_D_CASA
                  (Each)                        Tables
                                                                               Tables
    CASA
                                                                                                          FSI_D_INVESTMENTS
                                                                                         PRODUCT_ID
                            Product Name                Extraction: Extracts          ACCRUAL_BASIS_CD   FSI_D_CREDIT_CARDS
                                                        the data from flat files    ADJUSTABLE_TYPE_CD
                              Day Basis                 Transformation :The
    Credit                                                                                INT_TYPE        FSI_D_CREDIT_LINES
                        Fixed or Floating -loan         phase in which the
    Cards                                                                           COMPOUND_BASIS_CD
                                 Type                   raw data from the
                                                                                                           FSI_D_DERIVATIVES
                                                        source system is              COMMON_COA_ID
                           Interest Timing              converted to the               AMRT_TYPE_CD           FSI_D_SWAPS
                                                        desired format.
                        Simple or Compound              Loading :The process        REMAIN_NO_PMTS_C
   Treasury                                                                             REPRICE_FREQ     FSI_D_FX_CONTRACTS
                                                        of loading data into
                                Asset                   the final target tables      REPRICE_FREQ_MULT               etc.
                                                        (OFSAA) after                    AMRT_TERM
                        EMI Or Interest-Rate            thorough validation
                             Type Only                  and quality check is a        AMRT_TERM_MULT
                                                        part of this phase                                                        98
Reporting Requirements



SLR       -Structural Liquidity Reports


IRS       - Only Interest Rate Derivatives are
             included.


DLR       - Dynamic Liquidity Reports .


ADHOC -Reports
100

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OFSAA-ALM

  • 1. Oracle Financial Services Analytics Application-OFSAA Asset Liability Management SATISH KUMAR L CFA 1
  • 2. ALM in Banking. Master Maintenance Asset liability Management
  • 3. ALM basically refers to the process by which an institution manages its balance sheet in order to allow for alternative interest rate and liquidity scenarios. ALM-is a first step in the long-term strategic planning process.-Considered as ALM is Appropriate for institutions planning function for (Banks, finance companies, leasing intermediate term companies, insurance companies, and others) ALM is concerned with strategic Balance sheet management Involving Managing Risk In a sense The various aspects of balance sheet Management of risks caused management deal with by changes in the interest planning, rates, Exchange rates and the Liquidity position of the bank As well as direction and Measure and Monitor control of the levels, changes risk, and provide and mixes of ALM Is approach to Quantify suitable strategies for these risks , that provides assets, liabilities, and capital their management. institutions with protection that makes credit risk, interest risk, and liquidity risk Acceptable. And--------The Role of Securitization--------- 3
  • 4. The process will involve the following steps: •Firstly, Review the interest rate structure and compare the same to the interest/product pricing of both assets and liabilities. Interest rate. Foreign •Secondly, Examine the loan and the investment portfolios in the light of the foreign exchange/Liqui exchange risk and liquidity risk that might arise. dity risk •Thirdly, examine the probability of the credit risk and contingency risk that may Credit/contingency originate either due to rate fluctuations or otherwise and assess the quality of assets. Risk •Finally, review the actual performance against the projections made and analyze the reasons for any effect on the spreads. Actual performance The ALM technique so designed to manage the various risks will primarily aim to stabilize the short-term profits, long-term earnings and long run sustenance of the bank. *Credit risk: Risk describes the possibility in the repayment obligation by the borrowers of funds (delayed payment also facet of default risk) *Contingent risk :the off-balance sheet items such as guarantees,letter of credit ,underwriting Etc will give rise to the contingent risk. * 4
  • 5. The enhanced level of importance of ALM has led to the change in the nature of its functions. Micro-level- Price matching Macro-level- Basically aims to maintain The objective functions of ALM leads to the formulation spreads by ensuring that the the ALM are two-fold. deployment of liabilities will be of at a rate higher than the costs. Critical Business Policies, Efficient allocation of capital It aims at Profitability Example : IRS and through price matching Maturing matching Designing of products with •Similarly, grouping the assets/liabilities appropriate pricing while ensuring liquidity based on their Maturing profiles ensures liquidity. strategies. by means of maturity matching. •The liquidity gap is then assessed to identify the future financing requirements. • Example : Liquidity GAP 5
  • 6. The most common target accounts in ALM of banks are: •Net Interest Income (NII): The impact of volatility on •The market value the short-term profits is of equity represents •The ratio of the measured by NII. the Long-term shareholders funds profits of the bank. to the total assets •NIM: A performance metric measures the shifts in examines the how successful •The difference the ratio of owned a firms investment decisions between the market funds to total funds. are compared to its Debt value of assets and situations liabilities will be •Stabilizing this the target account. account will generally come as a statutory requirement. Economic NIM/NII MVE Equity NII: The difference between the revenue that is generated from the Banks assets & the expenses associated with paying out liabilities is NII.NII is more sensitive(Volatile) to the changes in interest rates. NIM = -VE represents firm did not make an optimal decision =>the firm has los more money due to interest expenses than was earned from investments 6
  • 7. The stress testing frame work included a wide range of Bank-specific and market (Systemic) Played a important scenarios role in :--  Stress testing: It is a key risk management tool during periods of expansion, when innovation leads to new products that grow rapidly and for • Feeding into capital which limited or no loss data is and liquidity planning available(facilitating the development of risk procedures; mitigation)  Stress testing is an important risk management tool that is used by banks as part of their internal • informing the setting risk management and, through the Basel II capital of a banks’ risk - adequacy framework. tolerance  The Risk Committee also reviews the stress- testing framework as part of the Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP). ICAAP :Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process (ICAAP).
  • 8. Asset Liability Management Interest Rate Risk IRR-APPROACHES GAP Analysis . Duration GAP Analysis. Simulation /Sensitivity Analysis. VAR Analysis Managing IRR: Hedging with Liquidity Risk Options, Futures, swaps Exchange Risk
  • 9. • Interest rate risk arises when the income of the bank is sensitive to the interest rate fluctuations. •The banks results of operations are substantially dependent upon the level of banks net interest margins. • Interest rates are sensitive to many factors to influence the NII & NIM. Including the RBI’S monetary Policies, domestic and international economic and political conditions and other factors. • Changes in interest rates could affect the interest rates charged on interest-earning assets and the Interest rates paid on interest-bearing liabilities in different ways 9
  • 10. For each time bucket the GAP=interest rate sensitive assets (RSAs) --interest rate sensitive liabilities (RSLs).  Gap Ratio = RSAs/ RSLs  When interest rates change, the bank’s NII changes =>ΔNII = (RSAs - RSLs) x Δr ΔNII = GAP x Δr.  A zero GAP will be the best choice either if the bank is unable to speculate interest rates accurately or if its capacity to absorb risk is close to zero.  With a zero GAP, the bank is fully protected against both increases and decreases in interest rates as its NII will not change in both cases.  This model measures the direction and extent of asset-liability mismatch through a funding or maturity GAP (or, simply, GAP). Assets and liabilities are grouped in this method into time buckets according to maturity.(the maturates are same and then select the gap period , which can be any where between month to a year . * Categorize :RSA &RSL are => requires balance sheet classification based on the rate sensitivity . Based on this banks should first able to forecast interest rate fluctuations . Identify RSA,RSL with in the first forecast period .thus all assets /liabilites are subject to repricing with in the planning horizon are categorize RSA.,RSL’S 10
  • 11. During a selected gap period, the RSG will be positive when the RSAs are more than the RSLs, negative when the RSLs are in excess of the RSAs, and zero when the RSAs and RSLs are equal.  Maintain a positive gap when the interest rates are rising;  Maintain a negative gap when the interest rates are on a decline  GAP analysis examines the sensitivity of the market value of Financial institutions Net worth(MVE) to change in interest rates . 11
  • 12. Duration Analysis studies the effect of rate fluctuation on the market value of the assets and liabilities and net interest margins (NIM), with the help of duration.  It also provides an approximate measure of market value interest elasticity.  Duration analysis begins by computing the individual duration of each asset and liability and weighting the individual durations by the percentage of the asset or liability in the balance sheet to obtain the combined asset and liability duration.  DUR gap = DUR assets – K liabilities DUR liabilities Where, K liabilities = Percentage of assets funded by liabilities  DGAP directly indicates the effect of interest rate changes on the net worth of the institution. The funding GAP technique matches cash flows by structuring the short-term maturity buckets. 12
  • 13. How the price of a bond changes in response to the interest rates  Duration is defined as the average life of a financial instrument.  Duration : A measure of the sensitivity of the price of a fixed income instrument to a change in interest rates .  Duration is proportional to the interest rate risk  Convexity is a measure of the curvature of how the price of a bond changes as the interest rate changes. Specifically, duration can be formulated as the first derivative of the price function of the bond with respect to the interest rate in question, and the convexity as the second derivative.  Duration Analysis : Price risk and the Reinvestment risk  The larger the value of the duration, the more sensitive is the price of that asset or liability to changes in interest rates.  Bonds with higher durations carry more risk &have higher price volatility . 13
  • 14. Scenario analysis: static.  The sensitivity of an asset/liability can be assessed by the quantum of increase/decrease( Various scenarios) in the value of the assets/liabilities of varying maturities due to the interest rate fluctuations.  Various Scenario Analysis :Discrete (continuous) distribution.  Example :2%,3%,4%. 14
  • 15. Simulation models help to introduce a dynamic element in the analysis of interest rate risk.  These methods are used to simulate of variety different scenarios (Randomly-Distribution) for the portfolio of Target date  Securities commonly used simulation techniques known as Monte Carlo – Methods , to value complex Derivatives and to measure risk .  Simulation methods approximates the behavior of financial prices by using computer simulations to generate random price paths .  What if scenarios, The absolute level of interest rates shift. There are nonparallel yield curve changes . Marketing plans are under-or-over achieved . Margins achieved in the past are not sustained/improved . Bad debt and prepayment levels change in different interest rate scenarios . (Parallel shift in the yield curve : changes in the yield for all maturities is same). Non –parallel shift in the yield curve ……..> 15
  • 16. High -Volatility Distribution  VAR is the maximum potential loss in market value or income.  VAR to be used in combination with Stress Testing  Refers to the maximum expected loss that a Possible range of values- Between ‘u’ & sigma bank can suffer over a target horizon, given a certain confidence interval. Low - Volatility  Measuring the market risk of a portfolio of Distribution assets and/or liabilities for which no historical data exists..  Calculate the Net worth of the organization at any particular point of time so that it is possible to focus on long-term risk implications of decisions that have already been taken or that are going to be taken. 16
  • 17. Liquidity risk is the risk of being unable to raise necessary funds (sufficient cash flows )from the market to meet operational and debt servicing requirements and to capitalize on opportunities for business expansion. Asset Liability Management (ALM) can be defined as a mechanism to address the liquidity risk faced by a Bank due to a mismatch between assets and liabilities either due to liquidity or changes in interest rates. Liquidity is an institution’s ability to Approaches : meet its liabilities Fund management ….managing surplus & either by borrowing or converting assets. Deficit 17
  • 18. FX- risk is the exposure of an institution to the Adverse fluctuations((unanticipated change) in exchange rates may result in loss in value in terms To the institution Approaches : Transactional exposure(cash flow exposure) : Foreign exchange risk may FX exposure arises from daily foreign arise from a variety of sources currency dealing or trading activates. such as foreign exchange trading, investments Translational exposure (Accounting Exposure) : denominated in foreign arises form overall asset /liability currencies and investments in foreign companies, making infrastructure of both on/off Balance sheets foreign currency loans , buying foreign currency VAR approach to risk associated with securities or issuing foreign FX-exposures currency -denominated debt ,foreign currency retail External approach: accounts and retail cash Forward contracts transactions and services,. Options Swaps ---------Currency gain/loss----- 18
  • 19. Master Maintenance Dimensions Management Hierarchies Filters Rate Management
  • 20. Dimensions-Dimensions are used to arrange(Stratify) business data for processing and Reporting purposes. OFSAA Is Seeded with 6–Key processing Dimensions OU-Dimension Members-Each Dimension comprises of a list of BU-1 BU-2 BU-3 members who share common attributes or characteristic features. Head- count- 32 Attributes-Dimension attribute values are used to qualify dimension members. It provides for defining member characteristics. Curre used extensively in processing ncy 20
  • 21. Dimensions are used to arrange business data for processing and reporting purposes.  The General Ledger (GL) Dimension is used to store all GLs of the bank, in form of its members.  GL Accounts used in the Financial Accounting systems of the organization, to store information of Profit and Loss and Balance Sheet items.  Organizational Unit dimension stores all Org unit IDs of the bank, with their respective descriptions.  An Organizational Unit is used as a segmentation and consolidating Reporting currency to Functional Currency.  Financial element dimension stores all Financial Element IDs to be used in the Cash Flow Engine .  Financial Element (FE) is used to distinguish business data based on its features.  On an event date, OFSA computes the results of that event, the financial elements.
  • 22. OFSAA supports 3 fundamentally different kinds of dimensions Key Processing Dimensions:  Are accessible as modeling dimensions for all of the OFSAA analytical engines.  Are expressed as columns in nearly all of your business fact tables  Support both attributes and hierarchies.. Standard Dimensions: Standard dimensions may support attributes and/or hierarchies depending on how they are configured, but are not used as processing dimensions. Simple Dimensions(Code dimensions,)Simple dimensions are "lists of values" that support neither attributes nor hierarchies. Total 150 simple dimensions .
  • 23. Hierarchies may be used to provide sophisticated stratification for either processing or reporting purposes.  For example, an organizational hierarchy might start with a Division level containing Western Region, Eastern Region, and Southern Region;  the next level down within the hierarchy might be state or county.  A product hierarchy might begin with branches for Asset vs. Liability vs. Service products; under the Asset branch, you might define additional Overview of OFSAA Infrastructure branches for Mortgage Lending, Commercial Lending, Consumer Lending, etc.  Hierarchies are used extensively in OFSAA models to assign methods to products and to support allocation methodologies.
  • 24.
  • 25. FSI_D OFSAA- Application Process Data-Element Hierarchy Eliminate specified data /values at instrument Eliminate specified data /values at Hierarchy Level(FSI_D/Entity) before processing level( product/organization) before processing. Select any where in the hierarchy GROUP: Combination of Data- Hierarchy filters are widely used in cost Element filters allocation and segmentation rules
  • 26. Group Filters may be used to combine multiple Data Element Filters  Example:  Data Element Filter #1 filtered on mortgage balances greater than 100,000  Data Element Filter #2 filtered on current mortgage interest rates greater than 6%,  you could construct a Group Filter to utilize both Data Filters.  In this case, the resulting Group Filter would constrain your data selection to mortgage balances greater than 100,000 AND current mortgage interest rates greater than 6%.
  • 28. Based on yield curve  The yield curve describes the relationship between a ,FI’s Can be issued particular redemption yield and a bond’s maturity. at Assets can be (Plotting the yields of bonds along the term structure will issued at higher give us our yield curve) maturity and liabilities issued at  Yield curve usually plotted on Government –securities. lower maturity.  It is important that only bonds from the same class of issuer or with the same degree of liquidity be used when plotting the yield curve.  The yield curve is used as a benchmark for other debt in the market, such as mortgage rates or bank lending rates.  The curve is also used to predict changes in economic output and growth, and it helps to give an idea of future interest rate change Current yield =coupon interest /Market price
  • 29. Boot strapping :implied future rates, known as implied forward rates, or simply forward rates, can be derived from a given spot yield curve boot-strapping.)  Zero –coupon yield curve :The zero-coupon (or spot) yield curve plots zero-coupon yields (or spot yields) against term to maturity  YTM-yield curve : The curve itself is constructed by plotting the yield to maturity against the term to maturity for a group of bonds of the same class. Yield curve points are taken from zero coupon Bonds Zero –coupon bond : The holder of a zero-coupon bond only receives the Face value of the bond at maturity. A zero-coupon bond does not pay Coupons or interest payments, to the bondholder . YTM-Cash outflow(Equal to the price of the bond) =cash inflows(periodic interest coupon are received on maturity) +Redemption Value (received on final maturity
  • 30. Vasicek : interest rates are dependent on market(short term interest ) & Economic activity. Hull & white : Deals with future interest rates . Ho-Lee: Interest rates which relates the bond to yield curve . the current yield curve is to be fixed .
  • 31. Hybrid yield curves are built up from either one or more standard yield curves  A Spread hybrid yield curve is defined as the difference between two standard yield curves. The "spread" type of hybrid yield curve may be useful in establishing liquidity risk or basis risk yield curves.  Merged hybrid yield curves represent a blending of two or more underlying yield curves.  In constructing a "merged" type of hybrid yield curve, you specify the percentage weighting applicable to each of the underlying standard hybrid yield curves.  Moving average hybrid yield curves represent moving average data of a single underlying standard yield curve.  These curves are typically used in Funds Transfer Pricing.
  • 32. Functional currency Reporting currency (consolidated) Exchange RATE A foreign exchange rate is the price at which one currency can be exchanged for another currency Spot :Involves the immediate exchange of currencies at the current (spot ) exchange rate . Forward Rate :is the exchange of currencies at a specified (or forward exchange rate ) over a specified date in the future . 32
  • 33. OFSAA Rate Management provides a comprehensive list of 179 ISO-defined currencies; Reporting Currency A reporting currency is an active currency to which balances in other currencies may be Consolidated in order to facilitate reporting. Functional Currency: Balances in reporting currencies may be, in Reporting turn, consolidated to the functional currency. currency The functional currency is both an active currency and a reporting currency. Note: At the time of installation, Rate Management requires the installer to designate a Functional currency for the organization. function function function In our LAB …the functional currency: USD. al al al Currency Exchange rates: In order to establish setup the a process of currency exchange rate , first we define the from currency (fixed or pegged ) then we must supply as a To currency (float ) value . 33
  • 34. Floating rate Fixed rate Base Currency Reporting currency Functional currency Default currency Non-Currency Basis- Seeded currencies-179 If status will be active – then Reporting currency will be active (asking –Yes/No)
  • 35.
  • 36. As of Date -All ALM processes refer this date at run time to determine the data to include in the process. The date that the extracted data represents. Origination Date :The date of the origination for the transaction account. This day may be in the future. or the past 36
  • 37. •Defining Time Buckets are mandatory for Statutory Reporting purpose. (Time buckets allow you to specify the time periods used for storing and reporting results.) •Time Bucket rules allow users to create the various time bucket definitions used for computing and outputting aggregated cash flows. •Time Bucket determines granularity of cash flow output and can be set at any frequency through a combination of daily, monthly and yearly buckets. 37
  • 38. •It is a modeling • bucket set according • Interest Rate GAP •Liquidity GAP future start dates. Buckets allow you to Buckets are similar to Income Simulation Buckets define Interest Rate GAP Liquidity GAP Buckets Interest GAP Buckets Interest Rate GAP buckets. •Income Simulation buckets. Bucket definitions • Dynamic Start Date are referenced by all allows definition of •The key difference is bucket based forecast forward start dates for that liquidity bucket business rules, computing dynamic impact only the market valuations. liquidity runoff •including Forecast financial elements. • The Dynamic Start Date Rates, Forecast allows exercise of Balances, Pricing Amortization of existing •The Dynamic Start Margins and business and any new Dates allow forecast Maturity Mix rules business assumptions. liquidity position as of and also by ALM some future date, Deterministic • Income Simulation Buckets are set up before Processes during defining Interest Rate •Considering relevant ALM engine GAP Buckets. assumptions, processing. •includingAmortizatio n,prepayments,Early withdrawals(early redemptions)and rollovers. 38
  • 39.  Product characteristic rules define payment, pricing and repricing characteristics for new business.  They can used to specify calculation attributes for both existing accounts and new business. Product Profiles :  Product Characteristic setup can be a time consuming process with more than 40 attributes, so Product Profiles allows to pre-define and save common product definitions and reference these definitions while defining Product Characteristic assumptions.  Save common default values for the majority of required fields The following Product Profiles are seeded during installation:  Bond – Adjustable Rate, Bond – Fixed Rate, Credit Card, Discount Instrument, Lease, Loan – Adjustable Rate, Loan – Fixed Rate, Loan – Floating Rate, Loan – Negative Amortization, Savings, Term Deposit 39
  • 40.
  • 41. Amortization : Paying off Debt in regular installments over a period of Time .  Interest in arrears : Interest on loan which is due to be paid at the maturity date rather than periodically during the life of the loan . The interest leading up to the due date is payable but not yet paid .  Interest in advance : borrowers can prepay the next years interest and claim it as a deduction when filing Taxes .  Balloon payment : a type of loan which Is not fully amortized over its term . a balloon payment is required at the end of the term to repay the remaining principal of the loan .  Negative Amortization: an increase in the principal balance of a loan caused by making payments that fail to cover the interest due Example : the periodic interest payment loan is 500,and a 400 payment may be paid contractually made .so remaining 100 is added to the Principal balance of the loan .  OAS :is a discounting factor used for Market value & VAR (stochastic process )  Currency Exchange gain/loss:  Model with Gross rates :  Gross rates : used for prepayments & Amortization  Net rates : used for income simulation &calculated for retained earnings in the auto balancing process
  • 42. To Value and Estimate the interest rate risk of both the MBS and ABS . 42
  • 43. Mortgage: a mortgage is a loan secured by collateral of some of specified real estate property which obliges the borrower to make a series of payments.  Mortgage is a contract , in which borrowers property is pledged as security for a loan , which is to be repaid on Installment Basis. (The mortgage gives the lender the right if the borrower defaults to ―foreclose ― on the loan and seize of the property in order to ensure that the debt is paid off )  The interest rate on the mortgage loan is called the mortgage rate or contract rate.  Mortgage backed securities: MBS are backed by a pool of traditional residential mortgage loans called MBS .  Asset Backed securities: Securities backed by loans other than traditional residential mortgage loans and backed by receivables are referred as ABS. 43
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  • 45. Patterns User defined patterns allow you to define custom repayment patterns for products in a portfolio Payment patterns: Differ in terms of how they Repricing Patterns: Define a series of Repricing Behavior Patterns: address payment patterns and events that The behavior patterns differ schedules, which determine describe the interest rate in terms of how they allow whether the payment events adjustment characteristics you to categorize cash flows constituting the pattern are over the life of a cash flow based on the specific determined by calendar dates instrument. behavior type being modeled or periods. Absolute: Payment characteristics Non –Maturity: commonly used for scheduled on specific calendar deposit products like checking, savings dates. and money market accounts as well as for Example: seasonal credit card accounts. schedule, such as agricultural or construction loans. Absolute These account types are similar in that they do not have contractual cash flows Relative: characteristics :Seasonal Pattern because customers have the option to deposit or withdraw any amount at any scheduled for certain periods of time. Relative : time (up to any established limits). Example: Modeling instruments with Graduated Rate Non Performing Behavior Patterns: commonly used for balances that are irregular payment frequencies. Mortgage. classified as Non-Earning assets(Non Performing Assets (NPA’s) ). Devolvement and Recovery Behavior Split: with both absolute and Patterns: relative payment events. commonly used for estimating cash flows associated with Letters of Credit and Example : Guarantees. multiple sets of payment patterns These product types are typically under a single amortization code categorized as off balance sheet accounts. 45
  • 46. Example of a loan that follows a seasonal payment pattern, in which the payment patterns for January, February and March are scheduled for interest- only payments.  As revenues for the customer increase, the payment amount also increases. Therefore, the payments for April and May are 80% of the original payment, and June through September is 100% of the original payment.  The payment decreases as the production season slows. The payment for October is decreased to 80% of the original payment, and the payments for November and December are decreased again to 50% of the original payment
  • 47. Graduated Mortgages :EMI’s start at low level and rise for a no of years & then become equal after specified no of years Traditional Mortgages :Repaid in equal monthly installments of both principal & Interest.
  • 48. Spot IRC Spot Input Forecast –Original Term Forecast –Remaining Term 48
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  • 50. Discount Method rules allow users to define the method for discounting projected cash flows for market value and duration calculation purposes. The methodologies contained in the Discount Method rules are referenced by the Static Deterministic and Dynamic Deterministic ALM Processes. Spot Input Yield curve Forecasted Yield curve Spot Interest Rate Forecast Forecast Code(SPOT IRC): (Remaining (Original Term): Term) Discounts each cash Spot Input flow period by the Discounts each (single rate): equivalent term rate cash flow period by : Discounts each the forecasted cash flow period by Discounts all on the base yield curve value of the point the forecasted cash flows by chosen on the yield curve value of the point the same on the yield curve (the yield curve as of the corresponding to corresponding to Input Rate . start date selected in each transaction the remaining term your ALM Application record's original (Term from the As- Preferences). term(Original Date) of –date)until each cash flow. 50
  • 51. Total 12 months a period. Forecasted –Yield curve 3months Remaining term 9-months As-of-data
  • 53. Loan profile of a bank will generally in long term in nature . Large volume of funds will be blocked in project financing and asset financing activities of the Institution .  Securitization is a an effective way to release the funds for further investments .  Securitization denotes process of selling assets by the person holding it to an intermediary , who in turn will break such assets in to marketable securities .  In securitization future cash flows from advances (like mortgages ) made by Bank are repackaged in to negotiable certificates and issued to the investors .  This arrangement induces the liquidity to the highly liquid assets .  In the process of securitization also reduces the Interest rate risk , associated to the rate fluctuation .  Mortgage pass through security :is a security created when 1 or more holders of mortgages form a collection (pool) of mortgages and sell shares or participation certifications in the pool ( a pool may consist of several thousand or only a few mortgages) . When a mortgage is included in a pool of mortgages that is used as collateral for a mortgage pass through security , the mortgage is to be securitized . 53
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  • 56. Prepayment: A payment made in excess of monthly mortgage payment is called prepayment .  Home owners do payoff all (entire outstanding balance) or part (partial pay down of Mortgage Balance) of their mortgage balance prior to the date.  Prepayment Risk: One of the major business risks faced by financial institutions engaged in the business of lending is prepayment risk. Prepayments, the amount and the timing of cash flows from a mortgagee loan are not known with certainty.  Borrowers might choose the Repay part or all of their loan obligations before the scheduled date. .  Prepayment –Methods : we cannot estimate the prepayment as in the same monthly EMI’S . So project a cash flow , is to make some assumption about the prepayment rate over the life of the underlying mortgage pool . 56
  • 57. Constant Prepayment Method: Calculates the prepayment amount as a flat percentage of the current balance.  Conditional Prepayment Rate (CPR)  CPR is a annual prepayment rate.  To estimate monthly prepayments, the CPR must be converted in to a monthly prepayment rate, commonly referred to as the Single monthly mortality Rate (SMM) SMM= 1-(1-CPR)^1/12. Public Securities Association Standard(PSA)–Method: expressed as monthly series of CPR’s. Assumes Prepayments are low for a newly originated mortgaged balance and then will speed up as the mortgages become seasoned. Arctangent Calculation Method: Analyze the prepayment behavior. The Arctangent Calculation method uses the Arctangent mathematical function to describe the relationship between prepayment rates and spreads (coupon rate less market rate). Specifically: CPRt = k1 - (k2 * ATAN(k3 * (-Ct/Mt + k4))) where CPRt = annual prepayment rate in period t Ct = coupon in period t Mt = market rate in period t k1 - k4 = user defined coefficients 57
  • 58. The arctangent formula describes the relationship between prepayments and the ratio of coupon rate to market rate. For 100% PSA 1) 0.2% CPR =for the first month. 2) Increased by 0.2%peryear per month for the next 30 months ..until it reaches 0.6% 3) A 6% CPR for the remaining months
  • 59. Curtailment: The prepayment could be the pay-off the entire outstanding balance or a partial pay down of the mortgage balance. When the pre -payment is not for the entire outstanding balance it is called curtailment .  Refinance: Refinancing is the tendency of the borrower to pre- close a costly loan and see the property refinanced with a cheaper loan .  Borrowers refinance for several reasons: to reduce the rate, reduce payments, reduce risk of future rate increases, and raise cash.  Seasonality: Seasonality pattern is related to activity in the primary housing market, with home buying activity increasing in the spring, and gradually reaching a peak in the late summer. Home buying activity declines in the fall and winter.  Mirroring this activity are prepayments that results from the turnover of housing as home buyers sell their existing homes and purchase new ones. 59
  • 60. Early Redemption(Early withdrawal): The Repurchase of a bond by the issuer before it matures.  Early redemption fees are often charged in the early years of many fixed rate ,capped rate or cash back mortgages, when they are repaid early.  If you are working with deposit products, it is possible to define Early Redemption assumptions within the Prepayment Rule. 60
  • 61. Conditional Assumptions can be applied only on detailed accounts (data stored in the Instrument Tables) and reference only the Cash Flow and Dimension columns that are part of the Instrument Tables. Conditional Assumptions are ignored when processing forecast balances.  You can define prepayment methodologies using IF-THEN-ELSE logic based on the underlying characteristics of your financial instruments, such as dates, rates, balances, and code values. 61
  • 62. Currency Forecasting-Forward rates Interest Rate Forecasting Rate shock Analysis 62
  • 63. Use currency exchange rate forecasts to account for the effects of currency fluctuations on income(RSA,RSL ‘s for change in NII)  Use interest rate forecasts to project cash flows, including pricing new business, re-pricing existing business, calculating prepayments, and determining discount methods.  Use Economic Indicator forecasts to include in behavioral modeling and scenario/stress analysis.  Scenarios : You can also set minimum rates (or floors) on any rule created for Currency, Interest Rate. For example, if you want to run a -200bp rate scenario, with short term rates <2%, you can set the minimum rate to floor at 0%, although negative rates are allowed if desired.
  • 64. For interest code – interpolation methods
  • 65. Forecast Balances: Rate-Volume Modeling-Forecast Rate Dependency Patterns: To discusses modeling of new business Balances: Customer demand for new Rate Dependency Patterns allow activity through the Forecast Balance you to establish relationships products often depends on interest rates or between the level of interest rules. other variables such as macro-economic rates, Rate spreads and ALM drivers. You can model this behavior by selecting a Rate—Dependency assumption. forecast assumption rules . Objective :Tailor the new business assumptions to meet your expectations of future originations, including the timing of new business and the effect of interest rates on new business amounts. Pricing Margin: allow users to define pricing margins (or spreads) for your products. Pricing margins work together with a underlying base interest rate curve to determine note rate pricing for new business volumes defined through Forecast Volume Detail Maturity Mix: Allow you to Balance rules. Growth : Define the Term distribution Percentage of growth of new business added % with in each during each forecast period. Modeling Bucket You create Maturity Mix rules (Income simulation to define the maturity and Bucket). amortization term for new . business volumes. . 65
  • 66. Rate-Level Dependent Rate-Spread Dependent Interpolation Range Rate Lag: Period by which repricing lags the current interest rate changes. Rate Lag :Defined for New Business Assumptions and Depends on the Timing Options Rate Tiers :Defined for Spread
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  • 68. Rate -Tiers Base- Interes t Rate -Tiers Modeling Interest Rates:at above or below Market Interest codes Using with Income simulation Buckets . Example : 25 Bp above the Market yield curve Gross Margin :Used for Pre-payment &Amortization Net Margin :Retained Earnings in the Auto Balancing Process Product characteristics : All Business: Enable Model with gross rate . New Business : Define Payment attributes Net margin flag Floating Net Rate Fixed Net rate
  • 69. ALL business :Enable :Model with Gross rate Product characteristics-Define New Business assumptions New Business : define Payment attributes : Net margin Flag Float Net rate . Fixed Net arte Select Product and currency Rate dependency patterns- Rate TIERS Pricing margins- Modeling Interest rates Net Margin Gross Margin Net margin : Net Rate is affected by setting the net margin flag in product char rule . Gross margin = Gross rate (defined in Net margin is set to fixed rate : Then net margin = Rate product characteristic rule ) +Added ( Interest -code ) +Net margin flag specified . Interest (Defined in New Business) Net margin is set to fixed rate :Then Net Margin= Rate ( Net ) 69
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  • 71. Rate -Tiers Base- Interest Rate -Tiers Income Simulation Buckets Start Buckets Maturity Date (Min value) MM (Modeli ng Per bucket) Amortization End Buckets Date Max value New Business Assumption Rate-Lag Note :Amortization term should always be greater than or equal to Dynamic ALM maturity term .
  • 72. Example : Mortgage originations may be divided in to  25%----- 5 year term(Maturity ) –--- 30 year Amortization  25% ----- 7 year term ---- 30 year Amortization.  50% -----30 year term ----- 30 year amortization . You attach the set of maturity assumptions to apply all new business volumes with in a dynamic ALM. 72
  • 73. Rate -Tiers Base- Interes t Rate -Tiers New Business Timing Options: Distributed :Result reach an expected average balance in Between beginning and Ending balance .(Roll-Over 3 Methods are Applied ) At Bucket End: generate result at the End of the Modeling bucket . result in irregular average balances & Interest accruals over the bucket Rate lag defined for New business assumptions and depends on Timing of options New Business Assumptions with Volume Detail(growth%) Rate-Lag If New Business option uses 1) Uses forecast interest rates (from Rate tires )- as of date with in the current modeling bucket (term ) less the Rate lag . 2) End of the bucket term uses - the look up uses the last day of the bucket less the rate lag . 3) For all other cases the mid point of the bucket less the rate lag .
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  • 75. methods defines at Each Modeling Bucket No-New New-Add- Target Roll-over Business Business Forecast –Zero Exact Amt Average Roll-Over change in (Absolute) of Business New Business Expected Average Reinvestment (Extension) of Balance per Modeling Is Added. Bucket Principal of an Existing Account. Roll-over End with New - Add Total Expected Balance Reinvestment of Existing by the End of the A/C Plus Expectation of Modeling Bucket New Business Amount Growth Growth Expected Percentage Both Roll-Over change in the over a Assumptions & Overall Modeling Bucket Growth Percentage (X2-X1/X1)*100 Assumptions
  • 76. Percentage of growth % with in each Modeling Bucket (Income simulation Bucket).  you select the Range of modeling buckets and input balance or percentage assumptions for each modeling bucket within this bucket range
  • 77. Derivatives are used to minimize Interest Rate Risk by using hedging or speculation. With respect to the ALM process, options can be used for reducing risk and enhancing yield. Call option strategies are profitable in bullish(if the market rallies ) interest rate scenarios with the maximum loss restricted to the upfront premium. Put options can be used to provide insurance against price declines, with limited risk if the opposite occurs. A futures contract is an agreement between a buyer and seller to exchange a fixed quantity of a financial asset at an agreed price on a specified date. Interest rate futures (IRF) can be used to control the risk associated asset liability GAP Interest rate swaps (IRS) represent a contractual agreement between a financial institution and a counterparty to exchange cash flows at periodic intervals, based on a notional amount. By arranging for another party to assume its interest payments, a bank can put in place such a hedge. Financial institutions can use such swaps to synthetically convert floating rate liabilities to fixed rate liabilities. Example :In case of a falling interest rate scenario, prepayment will increase.
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  • 79. With the Transaction Strategy rules you can Test the impact of various hedging strategies that are integrated with Basic scenario modeling assumptions.  Hedging :Try to minimize Risk (IRR/ER), not bothered about profits.  Arbitration :Generate profits –Is a process of where you try to take the advantage of market discrepancies (look profits by minimize risk )  These transaction strategies will be used to measured the interest rate risk using derivative instruments like Futures ,options, Forward contracts and swaps . 79
  • 81.  A futures contract is a type of derivative instrument, or financial contract, in which two parties agree to transact a set of financial instruments or physical commodities for future delivery at a particular price.  If you buy a futures contract, you are basically agreeing to buy something that a seller has not yet produced for a set price.  The futures market is extremely Liquid ,risky and complex by nature. Futures Position :  A futures contract is an agreement between two parties:  A short position - the party who agrees to deliver a commodity .  A long position - the party who agrees to receive a commodity.  The profits and losses of a futures contract depend on the daily movements of the market for that contract and are calculated on a daily basis 81
  • 82. Futures can be used either to hedge or to speculate on the price movement of the underlying asset. Currency Futures:  A transferable futures contract that specifies the price at which a currency can be bought or sold at a future date.  Currency future contracts allow investors to hedge against foreign exchange risk. Interest rate futures :  A futures contract with an underlying instrument that pays interest.  An interest rate future is a contract between the buyer and seller agreeing to the future delivery of any interest-bearing asset.  The interest rate future(IRF) allows the buyer and seller to lock in the price of the interest-bearing asset for a future date. 82
  • 83. Profitability This financial contract gives a right to its holder to enter into a trade at or before a future specified date. 83
  • 84. An option is a right to buy or sell an underlying asset at a future date at an agreed price. A financial derivative that represents a contract sold by one party (option writer) to another party (option holder). Call Option :An option contract is called a ‘call option’, if the writer gives the buyer of the option the right to purchase from him the underlying asset. Put Option :An option contract is said to be a ‘put option,’ if the writer gives the buyer of the option the right to sell the underlying asset. Exercise Date :The date at which the contract matures. Strike Price(Exercise Price) :At the time of entering into the contract, the parties agree upon a price at which the underlying asset may be bought or sold. 84
  • 85. American options :An options, can be exercised on any day during the expiration period are called American options.  European options :can be exercised only on the last day(always) of the expiration period.  Bermuda option : A type of exotic option that can be exercised only on predetermined dates, typically every month.  Bermuda options are a combination of American and European options. Bermuda options are exercisable at the date of expiration, and on certain specified dates that occur between the purchase date and the date of expiration. 85
  • 86. At-the-money: Exercise price is equal to the current spot price  In-the-money:  Call option : s>k strike price is below the current spot price of the underlying asset;  Put option : k>s The strike price is above the current spot price of the underlying asset.  Out-of-the-money:  Call option : k>s the strike price is above the spot price of the underlying asset  Put option : s>k the strike price is below the current spot price of the underlying asset. The buyer makes a loss if he exercises the option out-of-the-money.  Position Limit: The maximum number of options contracts per investor.  Exercise Limit: The maximum number of contracts that can be exercised per investor. 86
  • 87. Both are used in Montecarlo analytics. FLOOR CAP If interest rates rise above the agreed cap rate then A floor is an agreement where the seller agrees the seller pays the difference between the cap rate to compensate the buyer if interest rates fall and the interest rate to the purchaser. below the agreed upon floor rate. A cap is usually bought to hedge against a rise in interest rates and yet is not a part of the loan It is similar to a cap, but ensures that if the agreement and may be bought from a completely interest rate falls below a certain agreed floor different bank/writer. limit, the floor limit interest rate will be paid
  • 88. Intrinsic Value :is the value of the profits that are likely from the option.  The Intrinsic Value is also the value of an option takes when it is in-the-money.  For a call it is max (0, S – k)  For a put it is max (0, k – S)  where S and k are spot price and strike price of the underlying asset respectively. Time Value  The difference between the option premium and the intrinsic value. 88
  • 89. Interest rate swaps Currency swaps Basis swap Forward rate swaps Swap :Refers to the simultaneous purchase and sale of currency(at agreed exchanged rate ) for different maturities or vice versa 89
  • 90. There are two parties to a swap transaction, fixed rate payer/receiver and floating rate receiver/payer.  A fixed rate payer is the provider of floating rate funds and Hence the purchasers(Buyer ) of the swap lose when interest rate falls and gain when interest rate rises.  A floating rate payer is the provider of fixed rate funds and Hence the seller of the swap loses when interest rate rises and gains when interest rate falls 90
  • 91. Plain Vanilla or coupon or Generic Swap:  The plain vanilla swaps are those swaps where fixed rate obligations are exchanged for floating rate obligations over a specific period of time on a notional principal  Basis Swap: A swap in which a stream of floating interest rates are exchanged for another stream of floating interest rates, is known as basis swap  Interest rate swap : An interest rate swap is defined as an agreement between two or more parties who agree to exchange interest payments over a specific time period on agreed terms. The interest rates agreed may be fixed or floating.  currency swap A currency swap is a contract involving exchange of interest payments on a loan in one currency for fixed or floating interest payments on equivalent loan in a different currency. Currency swaps may or may not involve initial exchange of principal. A plain vanilla currency swap is a fixed-fixed currency swap in which each party pays a fixed payment on the loan taken by them  Forward Swaps Forward swaps are those swaps in which the commencement date is set as a future date. Thus, it helps in locking the swap rates and use them later as and when needed. Forward swaps are also known as deferred swaps .  Amortizing Swaps If the interest rates are fairly stable then the floating payments are also reduced over time. This swap is particularly useful if a swap is undertaken to manage the risk arising from mortgage loans. 91
  • 92. An interest rate swap (IRS) is a contract that exchanges interest payments between two differently indexed legs, of which one is usually fixed whereas the other one is floating. When the fixed leg is paid and the floating leg is received the interest rate swap is termed payer IRS and in the other case receiver IRS.
  • 93. Stochastic Rate index :The purpose of the Stochastic Rate Indexing Rule is to establish relationships between a risk-free Interest Rate Code (IRCs) and other interest rate codes or Indexes used for re-pricing existing business and pricing new business.  Example of non risk free (dependent) curves are: LIBOR ,Prime rate  The Stochastic Rate Indexing rule is a required assumption rule, that you select within a Stochastic ALM Process to calculate Value at Risk and Earnings at Risk. 93
  • 94. Static Analysis is the fundamental platform on which the ALM function of the Bank is built.  It is generally observed that a large number of Banks that offer the conventional banking products are able to address their considerations of adequate liquidity and sources of short term funds with the Static ALM analysis.  Banks are able to fine tune any assumptions in order to meet their strategic objectives. 94
  • 95. Dynamic ALM: is practiced by Banks where the market environment is extremely active and very competitive and often require the bank to realign their business strategies.  It is also useful when the complexity of operations is high.  Accurate evaluation of current exposures of asset and liability portfolios to interest rate risk.  Changes in multiple target variables such as net interest income, capital adequacy, and liquidity .  Future gaps 95
  • 96. Static Dynamic Deterministic Stochastic (Present (New Business (Scenario/sensiti (Simulation) Business) Assumptions) vity) Balance– sheets are maintained at Analysis for Various Monte carlo same level . Projected B/Sheet. simulation. Scenario (Forecasted (Existing Business Analysis Projections). Ex:2%,3%,4% Simulate Business Assumptions variety of Positions (OFSA Staging which can be Discrete scenarios. created and Area) managed in OFSA (uniform/conti ALM nuous) Basic analysis ->Information distribution. Random- (output is limited about Future Distribution. to the existing business B/sheet). Plans .
  • 97. OFSAA Processing Source Instrument Systems ETL - OWB OFSAA Tables Application Loans FSI_D_LOAN_CONTRACT S Term FSI_D_TERM_DEPOSITS Deposits Extraction FSI_D_CASA OFSAA uses FSI_D_INVESTMENTS the Instrument tables and Transformatio FSI_D_CREDIT_CARDS CASA configurations n FSI_D_CREDIT_LINES done and FSI_D_DERIVATIVES generates the result Loading FSI_D_SWAPS Treasury FSI_D_FX_CONTRACTS etc. Credit Cards
  • 98. OFSAA generates cash flows at the individual instrument level. Each individual instrument record processed, generates a unique set of cash flows as defined by that instrument record’s product characteristics. Source- ETL-OWB OFSAA- (Mapping ) Instrument Application Systems Extraction Transformation Tables ( OFSAA uses the Instrument (CBS/Treasury) Loading tables and configurations done and generates the result) Loans Data staging Area FSI_D_LOAN_CONTRAC TS Term Deposits OFSAA- FSI_D_TERM_DEPOSIT S source-Data Transformation/Look up Mirror FSI_D_CASA (Each) Tables Tables CASA FSI_D_INVESTMENTS PRODUCT_ID Product Name Extraction: Extracts ACCRUAL_BASIS_CD FSI_D_CREDIT_CARDS the data from flat files ADJUSTABLE_TYPE_CD Day Basis Transformation :The Credit INT_TYPE FSI_D_CREDIT_LINES Fixed or Floating -loan phase in which the Cards COMPOUND_BASIS_CD Type raw data from the FSI_D_DERIVATIVES source system is COMMON_COA_ID Interest Timing converted to the AMRT_TYPE_CD FSI_D_SWAPS desired format. Simple or Compound Loading :The process REMAIN_NO_PMTS_C Treasury REPRICE_FREQ FSI_D_FX_CONTRACTS of loading data into Asset the final target tables REPRICE_FREQ_MULT etc. (OFSAA) after AMRT_TERM EMI Or Interest-Rate thorough validation Type Only and quality check is a AMRT_TERM_MULT part of this phase 98
  • 99. Reporting Requirements SLR -Structural Liquidity Reports IRS - Only Interest Rate Derivatives are included. DLR - Dynamic Liquidity Reports . ADHOC -Reports
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