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J.P. Morgan creates a benchmark for credit risk measurement; CreditMetrics evaluates credit risks across an entire organization.


NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 2, 1997--J.P. Morgan today introduced a sophisticated new tool for credit risk measurement -- CreditMetrics(TM) -- which provides transparent methodology, data, and software to evaluate credit risks individually or across an entire portfolio.

Carrying forward J.P. Morgan's leadership in risk management, and following in the tradition of RiskMetrics, CreditMetrics(TM) creates an industry benchmark for quantifying risks in the world's largest market -- credit. CreditMetrics(TM), the first readily available portfolio model for evaluating credit risk, enables a company to have an integrated view of credit risk across its entire organization and product spectrum. It also provides indicators of value at risk (VaR) due to changes in credit quality caused by upgrades, downgrades, and defaults, as well as portfolio concentration.

In the interest of establishing a benchmark in a field with as little transparency (1) The quality of being able to see through a material. The terms transparency and translucency are often used synonymously; however, transparent would technically mean "seeing through clear glass," while translucent would mean "seeing through frosted glass." See alpha blending.  and precise data as credit risk management, J.P. Morgan invited five leading banking institutions -- Bank of America
See also:  and


Bank of America (NYSE: BAC TYO: 8648 ) is the largest commercial bank in the United States in terms of deposits, and the largest company of its kind in the world.
, BZW BZW Beziehungsweise (German: Respectively)
BZW BZFlag World (file format/extension)
BZW Blizzard Warning
BZW Barclays der Zoete Wedd
, Deutsche Morgan Grenfell, Swiss Bank Corporation
For banks in Switzerland, see Swiss bank


Swiss Bank Corporation (SBC) (German: Schweizerischer Bankverein (SBV), French: Société de Banque Suisse (SBS), Italian:Società di Banca Svizzera
, and UBS UBS Union Bank of Switzerland
UBS United Bible Societies
UBS United Blood Services
UBS United Buying Service
UBS Used Bookstore
UBS University Business Services
UBS Universal Building Society (UK)
UBS Ulaanbaatar Broadcasting System
 -- and a leading credit risk analytic firm --KMV Corporation -- to be co-sponsors of CreditMetrics(TM). With the support of these co-sponsors, Morgan hopes to accelerate market acceptance of the value of portfolio credit risk measurement tools.

CreditMetrics(TM) provides a useful methodology for managers concerned about risks in an environment where institutions globally are taking on more -- and more complex -- forms of credit risk. It measures credit risk across a broad range of instruments, including traditional loans, commitments and letters of credit; fixed income instruments Fixed income instruments

Assets that pay a fixed dollar amount, such as bonds and preferred stock.
; commercial contracts (trade credits, receivables); and swaps, forwards, and other derivatives. In this regard, CreditMetrics(TM) will be useful to companies worldwide that assume credit risk in the course of their business. It is important to note that CreditMetrics(TM) does not calculate credit ratings or prices; it provides managers with a valuable tool to help improve their credit risk management decisions.

CreditMetrics(TM) consists of three main components:

-- A methodology for assessing portfolio VaR caused by changes in

obligor The individual who owes another person a certain debt or duty.

The term obligor is often used interchangeably with debtor.


obligor (ah-bluh-gore) n.
 credit quality. This is fully explained in the

CreditMetrics(TM) Technical Document that is freely available from

the Internet (http://www.jpmorgan.com).

-- A historical dataset that is freely available from the Internet

(http://www.jpmorgan.com).

-- A software package (CreditManager(TM)) implementing the

methodology of CreditMetrics(TM) that can be purchased from J.P.

Morgan or any of the product co-sponsors.

J.P. Morgan developed CreditMetrics(TM) to:

Create a benchmark for credit risk measurement. Without a common point of reference for credit risks, it is difficult to compare different sources and measures of risk. CreditMetrics(TM) provides the yardstick for measuring these risks, making them comparable.

Promote greater credit risk transparency and better market tools for managing credit risk. With a more precise understanding of risks comes the ability to manage risks more actively; transparent methodology as well as broad and deep markets are essential to effective risk management.

Encourage a regulatory capital framework that more closely reflects economic risk. Many regulated institutions today are subject to capital requirements Capital requirements

Financing required for the operation of a business, composed of long-term and working capital plus fixed assets.
 that do not reflect economic risk. A portfolio VaR model for credit can be used as a risk-based capital allocation tool, equally appropriate for both internal and regulatory capital allocation.

"CreditMetrics(TM) is no substitute for sound judgment," said Stephen Thieke, head of J.P. Morgan's Corporate Risk Management group, adding, "Instead, it provides a useful tool that improves the analytical capabilities that a manager brings to bear in making a judgment."

Noting the competitive global marketplace and rapid growth in credit-sensitive capital markets, Thieke added, "As credit exposures have multiplied mul·ti·ply 1  
v. mul·ti·plied, mul·ti·ply·ing, mul·ti·plies

v.tr.
1. To increase the amount, number, or degree of.

2. Mathematics To perform multiplication on.
, the case for more sophisticated risk management techniques has become compelling. Common sense dictates that if businesses are demanding better performance in terms of return on economic capital, management must have a solid grasp of all forms of risk being taken to achieve returns."

Better risk measurement, better risk management

"CreditMetrics(TM) provides the necessary framework within which credit derivative Credit Derivative

Privately held negotiable bilateral contracts that allow users to manage their exposure to credit risk. Credit derivatives are financial assets like forward contracts, swaps, and options for which the price is driven by the credit risk of economic agents (private
 and other credit transactions, whether for hedging or investment, can be evaluated," said Blythe Masters, head of J.P. Morgan's Global Credit Derivatives group. Noting that CreditMetrics(TM) is being released at a time in which innovative new credit risk transfer instruments are evolving rapidly, Masters added, "credit derivatives have made possible more active trading of credit risks without interfering with other business objectives." She argues that the evolution of better models for credit risk measurement and better tools for credit risk management are mutually reinforcing: "Without the tools to transfer credit risk, we cannot properly respond to the recommendations of a portfolio model. Without a portfolio model, we cannot know which risks to trade."

In addition to providing a sound analytical tool for measuring risk, the CreditMetrics(TM) methodology encourages adoption of a regulatory capital framework that more closely reflects economic risk. The drawbacks of the Bank for International Settlements risk structure -- such as its one-size-fits-all risk weight for all corporate loans and lack of differentiation between diversified diversified (di·verˑ·s  and undiversified portfolios -- are increasingly apparent to regulators and market participants The term market participant is used in United States constitutional law to describe a U.S. State which is acting as a producer or supplier of a marketable good or service. When a state is acting in such a role, it may permissibly discriminate against non-residents. .

How CreditMetrics(TM) works

The CreditMetrics(TM) methodology assesses individual and portfolio VaR due to credit exposure. It calculates this VaR by considering the exposure profile of each instrument in a portfolio, computing computing - computer  the volatility in value of each instrument caused by possible upgrades, downgrades, and defaults, and, taking into account correlations between each of these events, combining the volatility of the individual instruments to give an aggregate portfolio volatility. The result is a comprehensive measurement of portfolio VaR arising from credit exposure that is comparable to VaR measures commonly used to describe market risk.

The portfolio approach

A portfolio approach to credit risk gives managers the power to quantify Quantify - A performance analysis tool from Pure Software.  the benefits of diversification Diversification

A risk management technique that mixes a wide variety of investments within a portfolio. It is designed to minimize the impact of any one security on overall portfolio performance.

Notes:
Diversification is possibly the greatest way to reduce the risk.
 and costs of concentration across a portfolio.

"It is only in a full portfolio context -- and with a model that addresses correlations -- that each institution's unique pockets of concentration can be properly identified," says Greg M. Gupton, CreditMetrics(TM) product manager. "Without this, investment decisions and risk mitigating mit·i·gate  
v. mit·i·gat·ed, mit·i·gat·ing, mit·i·gates

v.tr.
To moderate (a quality or condition) in force or intensity; alleviate. See Synonyms at relieve.

v.intr.
To become milder.
 actions would be less informed than need be," he continues. "It can make a real difference. Any given transaction can add a lot or a little risk depending on its effect on the overall portfolio."

There are a number of benefits that can be realized from the portfolio approach:

- It allows managers to control concentration risk (arising from

increased exposure to one obligor or groups of correlated cor·re·late  
v. cor·re·lat·ed, cor·re·lat·ing, cor·re·lates

v.tr.
1. To put or bring into causal, complementary, parallel, or reciprocal relation.

2.
 obligors),

which can be mitigated mit·i·gate  
v. mit·i·gat·ed, mit·i·gat·ing, mit·i·gates

v.tr.
To moderate (a quality or condition) in force or intensity; alleviate. See Synonyms at relieve.

v.intr.
To become milder.
 through diversification. - It allows managers to consider concentrations along a wide variety

of dimensions such as industry sector, rating category, country, or

instrument type. - It enables managers to interpret portfolio credit risk in terms

comparable to market VaR models such as RiskMetrics(TM) -- the

benchmark for estimation estimation

In mathematics, use of a function or formula to derive a solution or make a prediction. Unlike approximation, it has precise connotations. In statistics, for example, it connotes the careful selection and testing of a function called an estimator.
 of market risk developed by J.P. Morgan. - It gives institutions greater flexibility in making investment

decisions, extending credit, and taking risk-mitigating actions based

on quantitative analysis Quantitative Analysis

A security analysis that uses financial information derived from company annual reports and income statements to evaluate an investment decision.

Notes:
.

Using CreditMetrics(TM)

J.P. Morgan developed CreditMetrics(TM) to be the benchmark for credit risk measurement, so it's available industry-wide. The Technical Document and data are accessible not only on the Internet, but also from product sponsors worldwide.

For more information, please see "Introduction to CreditMetrics(TM)", or the CreditMetrics(TM) Technical Document, which are available on the Internet at (http://www.jpmorgan.com), or from any of the contact numbers listed below.

CONTACT: Press contacts:

New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, Joe Evangelisti, 212-648-9589

London, Richard Mahony, 171-325-4289

Tokyo, Shuri Fukunaga, 813-5573-1224

or

Americas

1-212-648-3461

cmx_amer@jpmorgan.com

or

Europe

44 171 325 8007

cmx_euro@jpmorgan.com

or

Asia Pacific

852 2973 5646

cmx_asia@jpmorgan.com
COPYRIGHT 1997 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Date:Apr 2, 1997
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