Search: credit risk/exposure

Sort by: Relevance Date
110 of 2,020 search results for credit risk/exposure

RBA Glossary definition for credit risk/exposure

credit risk/exposure – The risk that a counterparty will not settle an obligation for full value, either when due or thereafter. In 'exchange-for-value' systems, the risk is generally defined to include replacement risk (the risk of having to replace a contract at a potentially unfavourable price) and principal risk.

Search Results

The Australian Credit Default Swap Market

10 Dec 2011 Bulletin – December 2011
Daniel Fabbro
Two types of credit exposure arise from CDS trading. First, as discussed above, there is the credit risk associated with the reference entity. ... liquidity. More broadly, the CDS market remains relatively small compared with the bond market and other
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2011/dec/6.html

Australian Banks' Activities in Derivatives Markets: Products and Risk-Management Practices

10 Sep 1994 Bulletin – September 1994
3. 11. Credit risk is the risk of loss associated with counterparty failure. ... Forms of credit risk enhancement, other than netting, are not widely used by Australian banks.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/1994/sep/1.html

Bulletin March Quarter 2023

8 Jun 2023 Bulletin - March 2023 PDF 7038KB
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2023/mar/pdf/bulletin-2023-03.pdf

Australian Money Market Divergence: Arbitrage Opportunity or Illusion?

12 Sep 2019 RDP PDF 1464KB
10 Here we account for the difference between the notional dollar value of the asset and the institution’s risk exposure. ... weight. Second, loan collateralisation reduces the risk exposure to the borrower.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2019/pdf/rdp2019-09.pdf

The Role of Collateral in Borrowing

14 Jan 2021 RDP PDF 1784KB
credit supply, separate from mitigating counterparty risk and information asymmetries, as banks. ... manage their risk exposure by the amount they lend to a particular bank or even whether they lend to.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2021/pdf/rdp2021-01.pdf

The Role of Collateral in Borrowing

20 Jan 2021 RDP 2021-01
Nicholas Garvin, David W Hughes and José-Luis Peydró
Rather, the results suggest that lenders seem to be more likely to manage their risk exposure by the amount they lend to a particular bank or even whether they lend to ... The idea is that following unexpected system-wide stress, differences in risk
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2021/2021-01/full.html
See 8 more results from "RDP 2021-01"

Recent Developments in Collateralised Debt Obligations in Australia

10 Nov 2007 Bulletin – November 2007
Susan Black and Alan Rai
Because they are issued against a pool of assets, CDOs typically have exposure to the credit risk of a number of different borrowers, whereas a bond entails an exposure to a ... A cash CDO is one where the underlying portfolio consists of physical loans,
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2007/nov/1.html

Sensitivity Analysis

13 Sep 2019 RDP 2019-09
Belinda Cheung and Sebastien Printant
Second, loan collateralisation reduces the risk exposure to the borrower. If the borrower defaults, the cash lender may recoup most (or all) of their investment by selling the collateral. ... For repo transactions, the range of possible risk weights is
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/2019/2019-09/sensitivity-analysis.html
See 4 more results from "RDP 2019-09"

Measuring Traded Market Risk: Value-at-risk and Backtesting Techniques

1 Dec 2009 RDP PDF 400KB
accurate measure of market risk exposure. ... The difficulty with this though, is that such a highly aggregate figuremay mask imbalances in risk exposure across markets or individual traders.
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/rdp/1997/pdf/rdp9708.pdf

The Australian Credit Default Swap Market

22 Feb 2012 Bulletin PDF 674KB
Reserve Bank of Australia December Bulletin 2011
https://www.rba.gov.au/publications/bulletin/2011/dec/pdf/bu-1211-6.pdf