The consensus methodology for measuring risks relating to financial instruments follows the approach prescribed for regulated financial entities like banks and
insurance companies, which are required to measure the risks in their balance sheets and set aside capital that will allow them to absorb the losses should the risks materialize (generally referred to as "
economic capital"). This methodology requires building a
probability distribution of the relevant risk factors and pick the value corresponding to a predefined
confidence interval. For valuation risk, this implies building a probability distribution of exit prices. This task is challenging due to the sheer nature of valuation risk, i.e. the fact that a database of exit prices is hardly available. There is no commonly accepted methodology, and additional research will be required. Initial approaches proposed in literature include: • Whenever possible, build benchmark curves for key risk factors by leveraging market-traded instruments whose risk factor exposure shows similarities with the instrument being evaluated • Build hypothetical exit prices based on assumptions about the return that investors are expected to ask for the specific risk (an approach similar to one often used for pricing
non-performing loans) With respect to the amount of economic capital to be effectively allocated for a given instrument, one methodological approach suggests that valuation risk on one side, and all other risks relating to the same instrument on the other side are mutually exclusive. In fact, valuation risk for a financial instrument is measured under the assumption that the entity sells it (or transfers it to a third party, in case of a liability); once that instrument has been traded, the entity is no longer exposed to market, credit or other risks for that instrument and can release any capital previously posted against them. Under this assumption, if an entity suffers a loss due to valuation risk, its prudential capital will be affected by two impacts of opposite sign: • A negative impact due to the loss incurred in the trade, that directly dents into available capital • A positive impact due to the release of the capital previously set aside for the traded instrument for all risks other than valuation risk Under this approach, an entity may allocate economic capital for valuation risk for a given financial instrument to the extent that the risk of loss due to price uncertainty (valuation risk) exceeds the total amount of economic capital set aside for all other risks, as expressed by the following formula: Capital_{VR}(i,t_{Exit})=max[Loss(i,t_{Exit})-Capital_{OR}(i,t_{Exit}),0] Where: • Capital_{VR}(i,t_{Exit}) is the amount of economic capital to be set aside for valuation risk for instrument {i} at time {t_{Exit}} • Loss(i,t_{Exit}) is the hypothetical loss assumed to occur on time {t_{Exit}} from the trade of instrument {i} • Capital_{OR}(i,t_{Exit}) is the total amount of economic capital set aside for all risks other than valuation risk for instrument {i} at time {t_{Exit}} before the trade • t_{Exit} is the evaluation date, i.e. the date when instrument {i} is assumed to be traded Another way of expressing the same concept is that the total economic capital to be allocated for a financial instrument, including valuation risk and all other risks, is equal to the biggest of the economic capital allocated to valuation risk and the economic capital allocated to the other risks, as per the following formula: Capital(i,t_{Exit})=max[Capital_{VR}(i,t_{Exit}),Capital_{OR}(i,t_{Exit})] Where: • Capital(i,t_{Exit}) is the total amount of economic capital to be set aside for instrument {i} at time {t_{Exit}} • Capital_{VR}(i,t_{Exit}) is the amount of economic capital calculated for valuation risk for instrument {i} at time {t_{Exit}} (corresponding to Loss(i,t_{Exit}) in the previous equation) • Capital_{OR}(i,t_{Exit}) is the total amount of economic capital calculated for risks other than valuation risk for instrument {i} at time {t_{Exit}} before the trade • t_{Exit} is the evaluation date, i.e. the date when instrument {i} is assumed to be traded ==References==