Destabilizing properties of a VaR or probability-of-ruin constraint when variances may be infinite
Despite the use of VaR as a means to control risk, regulations that constrain VaR can have an effect opposite of their intent: to increase risk taking by firms that are doing poorly. Hence VaR constraint regulations can have a destabilizing effect on the financial system. A VaR constraint on the probability that future firm equity value will be less than a floor is a constraint on the probability-of-ruin when the floor is zero. The marginal price of risk with this constraint is coherent and also additive. For a wide class of distributions, the firm--when it is doing poorly--may pay a premium for a lottery that will increase the risk of its portfolio and the opposite when the firm is doing well.
Year of publication: |
2011
|
---|---|
Authors: | Eisenberg, Larry |
Published in: |
Journal of Financial Stability. - Elsevier, ISSN 1572-3089. - Vol. 7.2011, 1, p. 10-18
|
Publisher: |
Elsevier |
Keywords: | Cotendency Premium switching Power law Probability-of-ruin Risk management VaR |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Random variance option pricing
Eisenberg, Laurence K., (1987)
-
Destabilizing properties of a VaR or probability-of-ruin constraint when variances may be infinite
Eisenberg, Laurence K., (2011)
-
The marginal price of risk with a VaR constraint
Eisenberg, Larry, (2007)
- More ...