Key readings in risk management from CFA Institute, the preeminent organization representing financial analysts Risk management may have been the single most important topic in finance over the past two decades. To appreciate its complexity, one must understand the art as well as the science behind it. Risk Management: Foundations for a Changing Financial World provides investment professionals with a solid framework for understanding the theory, philosophy, and development of the practice of risk management by * Outlining the evolution of risk management and how the discipline has adapted to address the future of managing risk * Covering the full range of risk management issues, including firm, portfolio, and credit risk management * Examining the various aspects of measuring risk and the practical aspects of managing risk * Including key writings from leading risk management practitioners and academics, such as Andrew Lo, Robert Merton, John Bogle, and Richard Bookstaber For financial analysts, money managers, and others in the finance industry, this book offers an in-depth understanding of the critical topics and issues in risk management that are most important to today's investment professionals.
Foreword. Acknowledgments. Introduction. PART I: OVERVIEW-TWO DECADES OF RISK MANAGEMENT. 1990-1999. CHAPTER 1: A Framework for Understanding Market Crisis (Richard M. Bookstaber); Reprinted from AIMR Conference Proceedings: Risk Management: Principles and Practices (August 1999):7-19. CHAPTER 2: Practical Issues in Choosing and Applying Risk Management Tools (Jacques Longerstaey); Reprinted from AIMR Conference Proceedings: Risk Management: Principles and Practices (August 1999):52-61. CHAPTER 3: The Three P's of Total Risk Management (Andrew W. Lo); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (January/February 1999):13-26. CHAPTER 4: Reporting and Monitoring Risk Exposure (Robert W. Kopprasch, CFA); Reprinted from AIMR Conference Proceedings: Risk Management (April 1996): 25-33. 2000-Present. CHAPTER 5: Risk Management: A Review (Sebastien Lleo, CFA); Modifi ed from The Research Foundation of CFA Institute (February 2009). CHAPTER 6: Defining Risk (Glyn A. Holton); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (November/December 2004): 19-25. CHAPTER 7: Value and Risk: Beyond Betas (Aswath Damodaran); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (March/April 2005):38-43. CHAPTER 8: A Simple Theory of the Financial Crisis; or, Why Fischer Black Still Matters (Tyler Cowen); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (May/June 2009):17-20. CHAPTER 9: Managing Firm Risk (Bluford H. Putnam); Reprinted from AIMR Conference Proceedings: Ethical Issues for Today's Firm (July 2000):51-61. CHAPTER 10: Risk Measurement versus Risk Management (D. Sykes Wilford); Reprinted from AIMR Conference Proceedings: Improving the Investment Process through Risk Management (November 2003):17-21. PART II: MEASURING RISK. CHAPTER 11: What Volatility Tells Us about Diversifi cation and Risk Management (Max Darnell); Reprinted from CFA Institute Conference Proceedings Quarterly (September 2009):57-66. CHAPTER 12: Risk2: Measuring the Risk in Value at Risk (Philippe Jorion); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (November/December 1996): 47-56. CHAPTER 13: How Risk Management Can Benefi t Portfolio Managers (Michelle McCarthy); Reprinted from AIMR Conference Proceedings: Risk Management: Principles and Practices (August 1999):62-72. CHAPTER 14: Merging the Risk Management Objectives of the Client and Investment Manager (Bennett W. Golub); Reprinted from AIMR Conference Proceedings: Exploring the Dimensions of Fixed-Income Management (March 2004):13-23. CHAPTER 15: The Mismeasurement of Risk (Mark Kritzman, CFA, and Don Rich); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (May/June 2002):91-99. CHAPTER 16: Riskiness in Risk Measurement (Roland Lochoff); Reprinted from AIMR Conference Proceedings: Exploring the Dimensions of Fixed-Income Management (March 2004):40-51. CHAPTER 17: The Second Moment (Don Ezra); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (January/February 2009): 34-36. CHAPTER 18: The Sense and Nonsense of Risk Budgeting (Arjan B. Berkelaar, CFA, Adam Kobor, CFA, and Masaki Tsumagari, CFA); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (September/October 2006): 63-75. CHAPTER 19: Understanding and Monitoring the Liquidity Crisis Cycle (Richard Bookstaber); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (September/October 2000):17-22. CHAPTER 20: Why Company-Specifi c Risk Changes over Time (James A. Bennett, CFA, and Richard W. Sias); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (September/October 2006): 89-100. CHAPTER 21: Black Monday and Black Swans (John C. Bogle); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (March/April 2008):30-40. CHAPTER 22: The Uncorrelated Return Myth (Richard M. Ennis, CFA); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (November/December 2009):6-7. PART III: MANAGING RISK. Alternative Investments. CHAPTER 23: Risk Management for Hedge Funds: Introduction and Overview (Andrew W. Lo); Reprinted from the Financial Analysts Journal (November/December 2001): 16-33. CHAPTER