|
by Katerina Simons
November/December 1997
Modern finance would not have been possible without
models. Increasingly complex quantitative models drive
financial innovation and the growth of derivatives markets.
Models are necessary to value financial instruments
and to measure the risks of individual positions and
portfolios. Yet when used inappropriately, the models
themselves can become an important source of risk. Recently,
several well-publicized instances occurred of institutions
suffering significant losses attributed to model error.
This has sharpened the interest in model risk among
financial institutions and their regulators.
This article describes various models and discusses
model errors characteristic of two types -- valuation
models for individual securities, and models of market
risk. It also reviews a number of practical issues related
to model development and describes the approach taken
by bank regulators to model risk. The author points
out that a trade-off almost always exists between the
realism and the analytical tractability of a model.
Striking the right balance in the face of this trade-off,
she writes, and maintaining it through changing market
conditions for different financial instruments, is more
art than science and requires considerable experience
and judgment.
Full-text article 
|