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Cutting Edge introduction: The origins of the standardised CVA charge

Regulators are attempting to narrow the gap between regulatory capital formulas and banks’ internal models – but recent work in the area of the controversial credit value adjustment demonstrates just how far apart they remain. Laurie Carver introduces this month’s technical articles

An eye in close-up superimposted by a screen of random numbers

Bank regulators have lost their faith in internal models, and are trying to tie them more closely to regulator-set, standardised approaches – through reporting and, possibly, floors or surcharges – but this month’s technical articles illustrate the size of the divide (see pages 16–20). First, Michael Pykhtin, senior economist at the Federal Reserve Board in Washington, DC, presents his personal

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The wild world of credit models

The Covid-19 pandemic has induced a kind of schizophrenia in loan-loss models. When the pandemic hit, banks overprovisioned for credit losses on the assumption that the economy would head south. But when government stimulus packages put wads of cash in…

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