Financial institutions define their marginal cost of risk on the basis of arbitrarily chosen risk measures. We reverse this approach by calculating the marginal cost for a profit-maximizing firm, and then identifying the risk measure delivering the correct marginal cost. The resulting measure is a weighted average of three components corresponding the drivers of firm capitalization: (1) An external risk measure reflecting regulatory concerns; (2) Value-at-Risk emerging from shareholder concerns; and (3) a novel risk measure that encapsulates counterparty preferences. Our results demonstrate that risk measures used for pricing and performance measurement should be chosen based on economic fundamentals rather than mathematical properties.
December 2012
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