The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted economic activities, income of firms and individuals, and valuation of assets in one go.
IMF has officially declared the world is in recession! Bank of England has described the situation as being worse than the financial crisis in 2008. The scale of economic impact is unprecedented and is expected to have far-reaching consequences on the world economy.
Experts predict that the economic impact may change several industries permanently and the transition to a new normal may take a few years. The banking industry, in particular, is at the core of this crisis with increased credit risk, and will need a significant change in the processes, systems and models for risk measurement, loss estimation, and stress testing.
Depreciation in value of financial assets and other assets
Lockdown, recession and decline in the national income has adversely affected individuals, corporates, economies, and governments in terms of revenue, incomes, profits, tax collection, fiscal deficits, spend, flow of capital and demand for financial and other assets. Except gold, this has depreciated financial and other asset values and financial variables to a varying degree across products and countries.
Increase in credit losses
The worst impact of the lockdown is loss of income and rising unemployment. Businesses with high operational and financial leverage are getting hugely impacted and many will file for bankruptcy, further accentuating the demand, supply and employment conditions, with a resultant impact on value of collaterals.
Regulatory measures to tackle the impact
Regulators, supervisors and accounting standard setters are creating flexibility in prudential and accounting standards.
Regulators and governments have proposed moratorium on payments, relaxation in reporting obligations, and loan modification programs to provide relief to the firms. Regulatory authorities and governments are accepting higher level of risk at banks – which is lesser prudent measure – to keep borrowers afloat.
Limitation of the existing Credit Risk Management Framework
Existing credit risk framework is insufficient to measure and manage credit risk under severe stress conditions created by the pandemic.
In common practices, credit loss is computed through probability of default (PD), loss given default (LGD), and exposure at default (EAD) as risk measures. Banks estimate Expected Credit Losses (ECLs) and Required Capital from these risk measures. To come up with these measures, banks use 1) Forecast modeling on economic conditions; 2) Historical data and current state conditions.
In the state of closure of economic activity, it might be difficult to correctly forecast economic conditions, resulting in a large chunk of portfolio losses moving to further stages. To avoid the downward push amidst the uncertainty, regulators have offered payment holidays, within which borrower profiles will not be moved to further Days Past Due (DPDs).
Limitation of existing ALM and Market Risk Management Framework
Depreciation in asset value is further amplified by reduction in the market liquidity especially of emerging market financial assets and assets of lower quality. There is flight to quality. This changes the value, trend and relationship of financial variables creating a need to revisit treasury, asset liability management (ALM), liquidity and market risk models, processes and systems.
New Normal in Credit Risk Management
Inability to measure risk accurately is going to be a major impact of the crisis, which means banks will need to adopt significant changes to credit risk management process and supporting technologies.
On credit risk process front, we expect increased focus from credit risk management team on:
On technology front, we will expect the credit risk management team to make important changes to the systems covering:
New Normal in ALM and Market Risk Management
On technology and measurement front, we expect the ALM and Market Risk Management teams to make significant changes in Liquidity Risk and Market Risk Models and Regulatory Reporting.
The new normal of risk management
Risk management practices and technologies at banks are entering a new era and banks would need to reinvent measurement metrices, processes and technologies. This will involve a major overhaul of risk technologies. This is also an opportunity to consolidate multiple point solutions, adopt cloud technologies, and revamp and strengthen model implementation technology. Ultimately, this provides an opportunity to automate and industrialize target-operating model for risk management.
Harpreet Arora is Vice President and Head of Consulting at Wipro
Mohan Bhatia is DMTS Fellow and Head of Risk and Compliance Consulting at Wipro