Preface

The intent of this book is to provide the next generation of risk leaders, as well as current practitioners of financial risk management, a handy reference of techniques and concepts for identifying, measuring, and mitigating the major risks facing financial institutions. Risk management has evolved over the past decade into a highly quantitative field, drawing on increasingly complex mathematical and statistical concepts to portray a variety of traditional risks such as credit, counterparty, market, and interest rate risk. At the same time, the financial crisis of 2008–2009 laid bare the limitations of sophisticated quantitative analysis. Advances in quantitative risk management will continue; however, risk managers must be mindful of the “art” of risk management, namely judgment and experience that augments the “science” of risk management. Many risk management books focus on the quantitative aspects of the field rather than explore the importance of the qualitative side of risk management. This book is an attempt to bring both perspectives together in a cohesive fashion.

Another feature of this book is to provide readers with a framework for thinking about risk not as a singular outcome, but one that has consequences that may ripple across other parts of the business or risks. Leveraging experience from the crisis and afterward, the book follows the events of SifiBank, a stylized significantly important financial institution that provides the common thread of risk ...

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