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On successful completion of the course, the students are able to:
For financial contracts in practise there is a chance that either counterparty will default on (part of) the required payments. This course provides techniques for modelling and analysing the credit risk in such contracts. Two modelling frameworks of credit risk are considered, namely the "structural approach" and the "intensity based approach". The structural approach models a fundamental object of the firm (e.g. firm value or EBIT) and default is triggered either exogenously (e.g. due to bond covenants) or endogenously (when equity value drops to zero). In this setting corporate securities (stocks, bonds,
etc.) can be viewed as derivatives of the fundamental and, hence, option-pricing techniques can be applied to value them and study the default risk inherent in them. On the other hand the intensity based approach takes a reduced form view and models the intensity at which default(s) occur. It turns out that pricing in this setting essentially corresponds to risk-adjusting the risk-free interest rate which allows us to use many results from the default-free term structure theory developed in the course "Fixed Income Modelling". The credit risk models are used to investigate key objects such as the credit spread, default correlation, and the pricing of defaultable fixed income securities, e.g. corporate bonds, credit default swaps, and credit default obligations.
Course subject areas:
4088: Derivatives and Risk Management
5311: Fixed Income Modelling
Simon Lysbjerg Hansen
Lectures with in-class discussions
English
Lando, David: "Credit Risk Modeling: Theory and Applications", Princeton University Press, 2004.
Form of assessment: Oral exam (20 mins. exam with 20 mins. for preparation)
Examination requirements: Before taking the exam the student has to pass an assignment. The assignment is only offered in the term the course is being taught. The assignment is to be solved in a group of two students unless the lecturer explicitly grants an exemption. The assignment is evaluated internally on a pass/fail basis. The purpose of the assignment is to test the student in learning objectives less suited for oral examination. The oral exam tests the student's ability to meet the learning objectives by random check.
Examination aids allowed: All - except for any means of electronic communication, including calculators, mobile phones and PCs.
Students who wish to sit for the exam in both '5311: Fixed Income Modelling' & '5312: Credit Risk Modelling' must sign up for the 10 ECTS exam in '5310: Fixed Income and Credit Risk Modelling'.