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Volatility wrecks financial world's value at risk models - By Gillian Tett

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By Gillian Tett
October 12 2007
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Seven months ago, the Bank of England issued a strikingly prescient warning about "value at risk" (VAR) models.

While these models have become endemic in the financial world in recent years, they have a nasty habit of being self-reinforcing, or so the Bank observes.

When volatility is low in the markets - as it has been during most of this decade, when VAR models have flourished - these tools typically offer a very flattering picture of risk-taking.

That prompts banks to take more risk, which reduces market volatility further as more cash chases assets.

However, if markets ever turned volatile, this dynamic could quickly unravel, the Bank warned back in April*.

What VAR essentially does is measure the money a bank is likely to lose, with 99 per cent probability, in a specified time, based on historical data.

If prices are swinging around, implied potential losses tend to rise.

In April, the Bank estimated that a typical bank's VAR might theoretically double, with the same assets, if volatility increased.

Seven months on, that once-theoretical piece of analysis is coming back to bite the banks. In recent weeks, I am told that many investment banks have been furtively trying to reduce their published VAR levels in response to this summer's tumultuous events.

In the current environment, no bank chief executive who hopes to hang on to that job can afford to give regulators or shareholders the impression that they are being cavalier about risk. And since VAR is often used to define what level of margins - or financial buffers - are set against trades, some banks are doubly keen to cut VAR, to reduce pressure on their own balance sheets.

But as the banks embark on this task, some are finding themselves caught in an unpleasant trap. The easiest way to reduce a risk exposure is to sell risky assets, such as risky loans. In recent weeks, many banks have been trying to do precisely that.

But these sales have been occurring on such a large scale that they have pushed up market volatility. Thus, measured VAR has risen, exactly as the Bank warned all those months ago.

One big investment bank has recently analysed the impact of its own recent asset sales.

These suggest that, while these sales should have cut VAR by half in recent weeks on constant volatility levels, in practice this gain was more than wiped out by ensuing market price swings.

By scurrying to reduce risk, in other words, the banks may end up simply running to stand still.

This problem will undoubtedly leave many observers to conclude that there are flaws in the VAR concept. Behind the scenes, that is precisely what many risk experts now privately say.

Earlier this week, I attended a conference of risk managers in New York where one expert cheerfully declared that "no one in the industry really has much faith in VAR any more".

Or as another official at a big bank noted: "VAR has a role as a tool but it is just one tool. There is no point in using it unless you also engage your brain."

But the problem for the banks is that VAR has become so central to the financial world this decade - and so closely watched by shareholders and regulators - that it is difficult to ignore.

It is the financial equivalent of the modern examination system in the educational world: though all the practitioners can see endless flaws with the existing rules, nobody is quite willing to flaunt them in public.

It is a fair bet that, during the rest of the year, the banks will keep trying to lower VAR, while also knowing that their attempts to do this, by making asset sales, could be making their problems worse.

It is a painful vice - or a timely reminder of the golden rule that you rarely get a seemingly virtuous circle in finance that does not turn into a equally vicious cycle later on. * Financial Stability Report April 2007, Bank of England, pp33

gillian.tett@ft.com

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007