asrf
Asymptotic Single Risk Factor (ASRF) capital
Description
[
computes regulatory capital and value-at-risk using an ASRF model.capital,VaR] = asrf(PD,LGD,R)
The ASRF model is useful because the Basel II documents propose this model as the standard for certain types of capital requirements. ASRF is not a Monte-Carlo model, so you can quickly compute the capital requirements for large credit portfolios. You can use the ASRF model to perform a quick sensitivity analysis and exploring "what-if" scenarios more easily than rerunning large simulations.
[
adds optional name-value pair arguments. capital,VaR] = asrf(___,Name,Value)
Examples
Input Arguments
Name-Value Arguments
Output Arguments
More About
Algorithms
The capital requirement formula for exposures is defined as
where
ϕ is the normal CDF.
ϕ-1 is the inverse normal
CDF.
R is asset correlation.
EAD is exposure at default.
PD is probability of default.
LGD is loss given default.
References
[1] Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. "International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards." June, 2006 (https://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs128.pdf).
[2] Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. "An Explanatory Note on the Basel II IRB Risk Weight Functions." July, 2005 (https://www.bis.org/bcbs/irbriskweight.pdf).
[3] Gordy, M.B. "A Risk-Factor Model Foundation for Ratings-Based Bank Capital Rules." Journal of Financial Intermediation. Vol. 12, pp. 199-232, 2003.
Version History
Introduced in R2017b