Regarding the state of operational risk research, again I would like to encourage
potential authors to continue submitting papers to the Journal as we have recently
seen a reduction in the usual flow of papers. I would also like to stress that the
Journal is not only for academic authors. The ‘Forum’ section of the Journal contains
discussion of current events without too much emphasis on the mathematics and
technical aspect. We would be thrilled to see more submissions to this section
containing practical, current views on matters that affect your day-to-day business.
RESEARCH PAPERS
Basel II developed the first set of regulations for operational risk. The industry needs
to appreciate the importance of these rules in forcing the financial sector to pay
more attention to this risk. However, as we have previously stated here and have
heard from many practitioners, the devil lies in the detail. As these rules were signed
when most banks were still in their infancy in measuring operational risk they were
fully accepted as new challenges. As firms get ahead and progress in measuring
operational risk quite a few roadblocks begin to appear. This is the main theme of
the first two papers.
In the first paper, “Challenges and pitfalls in measuring operational risk from loss
data”, Eric W. Cope, Giulio Mignola, Gianluca Antonini and Roberto Ugoccioni
survey the difficulties in applying the loss distribution approach at very large
quantiles such as 99.9%; this is a very common problem that all practitioners face.
The interesting feature of this paper is that the authors do not find a solution
to the problems but rather propose changes to the regulations that would make
practitioners’ lives much easier.
In the second paper, “Estimating operational risk capital for correlated, rare
events”, Stefan Mittnik and Tina Yener corroborate what previous Journal articles
have found concerning regular correlation methods not being able to properly assess
the correlation of rare events. The authors prove that the objective of reducing capital
by bringing correlation into play in operational risk capital calculations cannot be
achieved under the current Basel II regulations.
In the third paper, “A new algorithm for the loss distribution function with
applications to operational risk management”, Dominique Guégan and Bertrand
Hassani adapt the Panjer recursion method, which aggregates severity and frequency
distributions, by developing a mix of the Monte Carlo method, a progressive kernel
lattice and the Panjer recursion itself. The authors claim that this simple approach
enabled them to drastically reduce the variance of the estimated VaR associated with
operational risks and also to lower the aliasing error we would have if using the
regular Panjer recursion alone.
FORUM PAPER
The final paper is in the forum section. “As risk management evolves, is operational
risk management important?”, asks Philip H. Martin. The author looks at the
importance of risk management, its role in business, its influence on corporate
governance, what causes failures and the impact of events. He also examines core
issues and potential remedies to prevent similar failures recurring.
The Journal of Operational Risk Volume 4/Number 4, Winter 2009/10 |