Credit Risk Management: Prof. Ashok Thampy
Credit Risk Management: Prof. Ashok Thampy
Walter Wriston
Former Chairman, Citicorp
Categorisation of risk
• Risks that can be eliminated or avoided by
simple business practices,
• Risks that can be transferred to other
participants, and,
• Risks that must be actively managed at the
firm level.
Risk avoidance practices
• Standardization of process, contracts and
procedures
• Construction of portfolios that benefit from
diversification across borrowers
• Implementation of incentive-compatible
contracts that hold management and
employees accountable.
Risk transfer practices
• For several of the risks which are
understood by the market and for which
there exists a market, the bank can tranfer
risk through the buying and selling of
financial claims.
– Eg. Swaps, credit derivatives, securitization
Risk absorbtion
• Risks that are too complex to be understood
and communicated to the market would
have to be absorbed by the bank.
– Credit risk arising from the lending activity of
the bank, particularly to small and medium
companies that are not tracked/monitored by
other market participants.
– Capital is an important component of the firm’s
ability to absorb risk
Credit Risk: Definition
• Credit risk is the risk that the counterparty
to a transaction will fail to pay the amount it
owes to a creditor.
• Credit risk is also sometimes referred to as
default risk, that is the risk of a default on a
commitment to repay interest and/or
principal of a loan or bond issue.
Credit Risk
• Credit risk arises most obviously in a
situation where a borrower may fail to repay
a loan, but it is also an issue in most
situations where a payment is due to be
made in the future.
• Eg. Interest payment on bonds, commercial
paper, certificates of deposit or swap
payments.
Credit loss
• Credit risk leads to credit loss: the amount
of money owed to the bank by borrowers or
other counterparties (eg. Swap transactions)
but not repaid, plus any recovery costs
incurred.
• Credit loss is an inevitable part of the
business of lending and therefore affects
nearly every business unit of the bank.
NPA : Sector and bank
ownership breakup
GDP and credit growth
Source: RBI
Gross Non-Performing Assets
Source: Report on trends and progress of banking in India 2017-19, RBI
NPAs : Some possible explanations
• S.H. Khan Committee (1998) :
recommended harmonising of roles of
Development Financial Institutions (DFIs)
and Commercial banks and that both evolve
towards Universal Banks.
• Commercial banks were mainly focussed on
working capital loans and DFIs were mostly
providing project finance. The committee
noted that this was blurring.
NPA: Some possible explanations
• Commercial banks – not well versed with project
finance and possibly lending more aggressively to
project finance.
• Corruption?
• Sectors such as infrastructure and steel have a high
proportion of NPAs.
– Infrastructure : Inadequate policy to ensure
linkages and approvals, example: Fuel linkages
to power projects not in place; Coal mine
allocation withdrawals following Supreme
Court order in the light of corruption cases.
– Steel : global steel cycle downturn; over
expansion funded with high debt
Asset Quality Review by RBI
• RBI inspectors check banks book annually
• 2015-16 : RBI did a special inspection
which examined a larger sample of bank
loans. Most large accounts were checked.
• Identified ~200 accounts to be identified as
NPAs
• Banks were under reporting NPAs and
engaging in ever-greening (giving new
loans to enable old loans to be repaid.)
Why AQR?
• “At the Reserve Bank, corporations and
banks come to us saying: ‘Give us some
forbearance. Don’t call our loans bad even
if it has not been paid for three years. Allow
us to postpone recognition.’ This is a wrong
way to go about it,”
Raghuram Rajan, RBI governor
https://www.thehindu.com/business/Industry/Asset-Quality-Review-and-its-impact-on-banks/article14494282.ece
Univariate Comparison of firms banking with
Government owned banks and private banks in India
A: Firms with exclusive B: All remaining firms
relationships with (GOBE=0)
Government Owned
Banks
(GOBE=1)
Variable Mean Median Mean Median
Investments/Assets 5.4% 2.2% 6.4% 3%
Tobin’s Q 0.745 0.589 1.041 0.708
Cash flow/Assets 0.059 0.060 0.067 0.070
Leverage 30.6% 30.1% 26.5% 25.8%
ROE 0.9% 5.6% 6% 9.2%
ROA 2.3% 2.1% 4.2% 3.5%
Growth in sales 15.9% 10.6% 19.7% 13.4%
Total Assets 2336 507 9950 1899
Srinivasan, A., and Thampy, A., 2017, “The effects of relationships with Government Owned banks on Cash Flow Constraints: Evidence from
India”, Journal of Corporate Finance.
20
Can GOB relationships mitigate cash flow
constraints?
Dependent Variable: Investment
(1) (2) (3) (4)
Srinivasan, A., and Thampy, A., 2017, “The effects of relationships with Government Owned banks on Cash Flow
Constraints: Evidence from India”, Journal of Corporate Finance. 21
GOB relationships mitigate cash flow
constraints for the larger firms
Firms with sales Firms with sales
< Rs. 1 billion > Rs. 1 billion
N 29304
2 statistic 3336
Prob > 2 0.0000
Srinivasan, A., and Thampy, A., 2017, “The effects of relationships with Government Owned banks on Cash Flow
Constraints: Evidence from India”, Journal of Corporate Finance.
23
Can credit risk be eliminated?
• Credit risk cannot be eliminated for a bank
if it undertakes lending to non-sovereign
borrowers.
• Sub-sovereigns – states, municipalities
• Private borrowers
– George Scott, of First National Bank (now Citigroup), quoted in Altman, E.I.,
Caouette, J.B., and Narayanan, P., Managing Credit Risk, 1998, page 85.
Credit Analysis Process Flow
Repayment Motivation for Lenders credit
strategy Loan: Why? culture
Management analysis:
Financial Statement Analysis: Industry Analysis:
Competence, Integrity
Balance Sheet and cash flow -Position in industry
Depth
-Efficiency and costs -Market share
-Profitability -Cost efficiency
-Stability of earnings -Innovation trends
-Leverage
-Assumptions for projections
Risk rating
Financial Simulation
Qualitative arguments Covenants
Breakeven Pricing
Loan documentation
Stress Testing
Legal opinions
Loan Decision
Credit risk measurement
AA 38 28 12.9 10.1
A 43 34 9.1 6.1
BB 63 57 3.4 2.1
B 75 70 1.8 0.8
➔ Credit rationing
k
Summary
• Credit risk cannot be avoided by a bank.
• Credit risk can be managed to keep credit risk
within acceptable limits - within expected loss.
• Unexpected loss should be very rare.
• Banks need to use the maximum information for
decision making and have a good risk
management system to reduce credit risk.
• Regulation plays an important role in accounting
for bad debts and providing for NPAs, thus
reducing the chance of an FI failing due to credit
risk.