A Complete Guide to Credit Derivatives: CDS, TRS, Credit Options, and CLNs

Credit derivatives have become one of the most significant innovations in modern financial markets. They allow institutions to transfer and manage credit risk without necessarily transferring the underlying asset. By doing so, they provide critical flexibility in risk management, investment strategies, and capital optimization. What is a Credit Derivative? A credit derivative is a financial…

Credit Risk Models in India: From PD–LGD–EAD to RAROC and Risk-Based Pricing

Credit risk models quantify and manage the likelihood and impact of borrower default across individual exposures and portfolios. They inform underwriting, pricing, provisioning, capital allocation, portfolio steering, and performance measurement, making them a core pillar of modern bank risk governance and profitability. Credit risk models in India support underwriting, provisioning, capital computation, portfolio steering, and…

Understanding Portfolio Credit Risk: Systematic, Unsystematic, Concentration, and Correlation Risks

Portfolio credit risk is the aggregate risk arising from a collection of credit exposures, driven by macroeconomic conditions, borrower-specific factors, exposure concentrations, and inter-linkages across obligors and sectors. This article explains the key risk drivers—systematic risk, unsystematic/idiosyncratic/diversifiable risk, concentration risk, and correlation risks—and frames how banks can measure and manage them in practice. Systematic risk…

Analyzing Risk at Every Level: Business, Financial, Industry, and External Risk Factors

A robust credit assessment distinguishes between obligor/borrower risk, business (operating) risk, and financial risk, then evaluates how these risks interact across industry, entity, and portfolio levels. This integrated view helps align underwriting with risk appetite, price loans for risk, and anticipate early warning signals. Obligor/borrower risk Obligor risk refers to the borrower’s overall capacity and…

Balancing Goals with Risk and Reward: Strategy, Risk Appetite, and Loan Policy in Banking

Credit Risk Management (CRM) is the backbone of sound banking practices. It ensures that banks strike a balance between growth-oriented lending and prudent risk control. An effective framework combines strategy, financial goals, loan policies, due diligence, underwriting standards, and organizational discipline to safeguard both customer trust and shareholder value. Strategic Approach to Credit Risk Credit…

Foundations of Credit Risk: Framework, Culture, and Core Building Blocks

Credit risk management is essential to protect capital, sustain earnings, and enable prudent growth across credit cycles, making it a foundational pillar of safe and sound banking practice. Need for a framework A formal credit risk management framework ensures risks are consistently identified, measured, monitored, controlled, and reported across the credit lifecycle, aligning day-to-day lending…

A Guide to Credit Risk: Balancing Borrower, Portfolio, Systematic, and Unsystematic Exposures

Credit risk is at the heart of banking and finance. Every loan or investment carries the possibility that the borrower may fail to meet repayment obligations, creating a serious challenge for financial institutions. A well-structured credit risk management framework helps in identifying, measuring, monitoring, and controlling this risk so that banks can protect their balance…