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Value at Risk
Book

Value at Risk

The New Benchmark for Controlling Derivatives Risk

McGraw-Hill, 1997 plus...

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Editorial Rating

6

Qualities

  • For Experts

Recommendation

As demonstrated by the bankruptcies of Britain’s Barings Bank and Orange County, Calif., any organization that dabbles in derivatives investments needs sophisticated risk-assessment tools like "Value at Risk." The concept of VAR is simple - this single number shows just how much an institution’s investment portfolio stands to lose. But calculating VAR is anything but simple, as author Phillippe Jorion’s complex formulas and dense prose illustrate. Jorion does an admirable job of explaining exactly why Barings went broke, but his book is not for the uninitiated. Without skipping a beat, Jorion throws around impenetrable phrases like "generalized autoregressive heteroskedastic model." Nevertheless, getAbstract recommends this necessarily complex book to money managers who need to gauge the downside of sophisticated derivative investments; the rest of us can simply peruse its intriguing sagas of financial disaster, take an aspirin and lie down.

Take-Aways

  • Derivatives - investments whose values are derived from underlying assets - are used to hedge financial risk.
  • Forward and futures contracts are the basic derivatives.
  • Swaps, another type of derivative, are an agreement to exchange cash flows.

About the Author

Philippe Jorion  is a professor of finance at the University of California at Irvine. He has a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. He is author of Big Bets Gone Bad: Derivatives and Bankruptcy in Orange County.