X-Value Adjustment ( XVA, xVA) is an umbrella term referring to a number of different "valuation adjustments" that banks must make when assessing the value of derivative contracts that they have entered into. The purpose of these is twofold: primarily to hedge for possible losses due to other parties' failures to pay amounts due on the derivative contracts; but also to determine (and hedge) the amount of capital required under the Basel III. XVA has led to the creation of Trading desk in many banking institutions to manage XVA exposures.International Association of Credit Portfolio Managers (2018). "The Evolution of XVA Desk Management"
This, in turn, assumes that derivatives can be traded without taking on credit risk. During the 2008 financial crisis, many financial institutions failed, leaving their counterparts with claims on derivative contracts that were paid only in part. Therefore it became clear that counterparty credit risk must also be considered in derivatives valuation, and the risk neutral value is to be adjusted correspondingly.
When the exposure is not collateralized then a credit valuation adjustment, or CVA, is subtracted from this value Derivatives Pricing after the 2007–2008 Crisis: How the Crisis Changed the Pricing Approach, Didier Kouokap Youmbi, Bank of England – Prudential Regulation Authority (the logic: an institution insists on paying less for the option, knowing that the counterparty may default on its unrealized gain). This CVA is the discounted risk-neutral value of the loss expected due to the counterparty not paying in accordance with the contractual terms, and is typically calculated under a simulation framework;John C. Hull and Alan White (2014). Collateral and Credit Issues in Derivatives Pricing. Rotman School of Management Working Paper No. 2212953 see .
When transactions are governed by a master agreement that includes netting-off of contract exposures, then the expected loss from a default depends on the net exposure of the whole portfolio of derivative trades outstanding under the agreement rather than being calculated on a transaction-by-transaction basis. The CVA (and xVA) applied to a new transaction should be the incremental effect of the new transaction on the portfolio CVA.
While the CVA reflects the market value of counterparty credit risk, additional Valuation Adjustments for debit, funding cost, regulatory capital and margin may similarly be added. XVA and Collateral: pricing and managing new liquidity risks. Andrew Green XVA: About CVA, DVA, FVA and Other Market Adjustments, Discussion paper: Louis Bachelier Finance and Sustainable Growth Labex. Stephane Crepey As with CVA, these results are modeled via simulation as a function of the risk-neutral expectation of (a) the values of the underlying instrument and the relevant market values, and (b) the creditworthiness of the counterparty. This approach relies on an extension of the economic arguments underlying standard derivatives valuation.
These XVA include the following; and will require careful and correct aggregation to avoid double counting:
Other adjustments are also sometimes made including TVA, for tax, and RVA, for replacement of the derivative on downgrade. FVA may be decomposed into FCA for receivables and FBA for payables – where FCA is due to self-funded borrowing spread over Libor, and FBA due to self funded lending. Relatedly, LVA represents the specific liquidity adjustment, while CollVA is the value of the optionality embedded in a CSA to post collateral in different currencies. CRA, the collateral rate adjustment, reflects the present value of the expected excess of net interest paid on cash collateral over the net interest that would be paid if the interest rate equaled the risk-free rate.
One notable impact of this standard, is that bank earnings are subject to XVA volatility, (largely) a function of changing counterparty credit risk. A major task of the XVA-desk, therefore,James Lee (2010).
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> Counterparty credit risk pricing, assessment, and dynamic hedging, Citigroup Global Markets is to hedge this exposure; see . This is achieved by buying, for example, credit default swaps: this "CDS protection" applies in that its value is driven, also, by the counterparty's credit worthiness. "Components of CVA Hedging"; §16.2 in John Gregory (2014). "Counterparty Credit Risk and Credit Value Adjustment: A Continuing Challenge for Global Financial Markets", 2nd Edition. Wiley.
Hedges can also counter the variability of the exposure component of CVA risk, offsetting PFE at a given quantile.
Under Basel III banks are required to hold specific regulatory capital on the net CVA-risk.Bank for International Settlements (2020). MAR 50 - Credit valuation adjustment framework (To distinguish: this charge for CVA addresses the potential mark-to-market loss, while the SA-CCR framework addresses counterparty risk itself.Bank for International Settlements (2018). Counterparty credit risk in Basel III - Executive Summary) Two approaches are available for calculating the CVA required-capital: the standardised approach (SA-CVA) and the basic approach (BA-CVA). Banks must use BA-CVA unless they receive approval from their relevant supervisory authority to use SA-CVA.
The XVA-desk is then responsible for managing counterparty risk as well as (minimizing) the capital requirements under Basel.Kenneth Kapner and Charles Gates (2016). "The Long and Short of It: An Overview of XVA". GFMI The requirements of the XVA-desk differ from those of the Risk Control group and it is not uncommon to see institutions use different systems for risk exposure management on one hand, and XVA pricing and hedging on the other, with the desk employing its own quants.
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