Counterparty Credit risk has become the key
financial risk for banks and other financial institutions to understand
, quantify and manage over the past few years. Indeed, during the recent
crisis the share price performance of the companies with the longest history in
CVA trading was substantially better than their peers. Counterparty Credit
continues to be poorly understood.
This intensive and practical course covers all key
aspects of counterparty risk, especially in relation to CVA (credit value adjustment)
and develops the basic models and methodologies for the quantification of
counterparty risk. All related aspects such as PFE, default probability,
netting, collateralisation, credit derivatives and wrong way risks are covered
in detail. Case studies and practical exercises will consolidate knowledge
gained throughout the training course.
COMPLIMENTARY BOOK- delegates will receive a free copy of the trainer's
new book “Counterparty credit risk: the next challenge for the global financial
markets
About The
Trainer:
Dr. Jon Gregory
Independent Consultant and Author
Dr Jon Gregory is a consultant specialising in the
area of counterparty risk. He started his career at Salomon Brothers (now
Citigroup). From 1997 to 2005, he worked for BNP Paribas, initially developing
the framework for the pricing and management of counterparty risk for the fixed
income division and later being part of the rapid growth of the credit
derivatives business. From 2005 to 2008, he was Global Head of Credit Analytics
at Barclays Capital based in London. He has published many papers in the area
of credit risk, recently looking at some of the complex counterparty risk
issues in relation to the credit crisis. In 2001, he was co-author of the book
“Credit: The Complete Guide to Pricing, Hedging and Risk
Management”, short-listed for the Kulp-Wright Book Award for the most significant text in the
field of risk management and insurance. He is also the author of the recent
book “Counterparty credit risk: The next challenge for the global financial
markets” published by Wiley Finance. Jon holds a PhD from Cambridge University.