E-Book, Englisch, 592 Seiten, E-Book
Reihe: Wiley Finance Editions
Culp The ART of Risk Management
1. Auflage 2002
ISBN: 978-0-471-26369-2
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Alternative Risk Transfer, Capital Structure, and the Convergence of Insurance and Capital Markets
E-Book, Englisch, 592 Seiten, E-Book
Reihe: Wiley Finance Editions
ISBN: 978-0-471-26369-2
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Learn about today's hottest new risk management tools
One of the hottest areas of finance today, alternative risktransfer, or ART, refers to the use of various insurance productsto manage market, credit, operational, legal, environmental, andother forms of risk. As the capital and insurance markets continueto converge, the number and complexity of new risk-defrayinginsurance products available to corporations, brokerages, moneymanagers and other financial professionals will continue to grow.Expert Christopher L. Culp uses case studies of recent ARTtransactions used by risk managers to put the field intoperspective for financial professionals and to acquaint them withthe various types of risk control products now available. Inaddition he explores, in-depth, the links between ART, derivativesand bank-arranged risk financing, and he explains the keydifferences between classic insurance products and financialguarantees, risk financing, bundled layering, and other ART forms.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.
PREFACE: COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO CORPORATION FINANCE.
PART I: THE QUEST FOR OPTIMAL CAPITAL STRUCTURE.
CHAPTER 1: The Nature of Financial Capital.
Appendix 1-1: A Brief Introduction to Capital Theory.
Appendix 1-2: A Review of Basic Option Concepts.
CHAPTER 2: A Securities Perspective on Capital Structure.
CHAPTER 3: When Is Capital Structure Irrelevant?
CHAPTER 4: Benefits and Costs of Debt and the "Trade-off Theory" ofOptimal Capital Structure.
CHAPTER 5: Asymmetric Information, Adverse Selection, and the"Pecking Order Theory" of Optimal Capital Structure.
CHAPTER 6: Distinguishing between Capital Structure Theories.
CHAPTER 7: Risk and Signaling Capital.
CHAPTER 8: Regulatory Capital.
PART II: CAPITAL STRUCTURE AND RISK MANAGEMENT.
CHAPTER 9: A Vocabulary of Risk.
CHAPTER 10: Risk Management as a Process.
CHAPTER 11: Risk Management and Capital Structure.
PART III: CLASSICAL RISK TRANSFORMATION PRODUCTS.
CHAPTER 12: Commercial Banking Products.
CHAPTER 13: Derivatives.
CHAPTER 14: Asset Disposition and Securitized Products.
CHAPTER 15: Insurance.
CHAPTER 16: Reinsurance.
PART IV: ALTERNATIVE RISK TRANSFER PRODUCTS.
CHAPTER 17: Alternative Risk Finance vs. Alternative RiskTransfer.
CHAPTER 18: Alternative Risk Finance: Self-Insurance, Captives, andCaptivelike Structures.
CHAPTER 19: Alternative Risk Finance: Finite Risk Products andSolutions.
CHAPTER 20: Integrated Multiline and Multitrigger Alternative RiskTransfer Products.
CHAPTER 21: Committed Capital and Guarantees.
CHAPTER 22: Alternative Risk Securitizations and SecuritizedProducts.
PART V: PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR WOULD-BE ARTISTS.
CHAPTER 23: USAA Prime: Choice Cats for Diversifying Investors(Morton N. Lane).
CHAPTER 24: Emerging Role of Patent Law in Risk Finance (J. B.Heaton).
CHAPTER 25: Weather Derivatives or Insurance? Considerations forEnergy Companies (Andrea S. Kramer).
CHAPTER 26: Convergence of Insurance and Investment Banking:Representations and Warranties Insurance and Other InsuranceProducts Designed to Facilitate Corporate Transactions (Theodore A.Boundas and Teri Lee Ferro).
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
INDEX.