Risk capital is an important input for management functions. Capital structure decisions, capital budgeting, and ex post performance measurement require different measures of risk capital. While it has become common to estimate risk capital using VaR models, it is not clear that VaR‐based capital estimates are optimal for applications to management functions (e.g. risk management, capital budgeting, performance measurement, or regulation). This article considers three typical problems that require an estimate of credit risk capital: an optimal equity capital allocation; an optimal capital allocation for capital budgeting decisions; and an optimal capital allocation to remove moral hazard incentives from a compensation contract based on ex post performance. The optimal credit risk capital allocation is different for each problem and is never consistent with a credit VaR estimate of unexpected loss. The results demonstrate that the optimal risk capital allocation depends on the objective.
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1 February 2001
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February 01 2001
Estimating Credit Risk Capital: What's the Use? Available to Purchase
PAUL KUPIEC
PAUL KUPIEC
Deputy division chief of the Monetary and Exchange Affairs Department at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, DC.
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2331-2947
Print ISSN: 1526-5943
© MCB UP Limited
2001
Journal of Risk Finance (2001) 2 (3): 17–34.
Citation
KUPIEC P (2001), "Estimating Credit Risk Capital: What's the Use?". Journal of Risk Finance , Vol. 2 No. 3 pp. 17–34, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb043465
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