3. risk definition
• the possibility of suffering harm or loss; danger.
• a factor, thing, element, or course involving uncertain danger;
a hazard
• combination of the probability of an event and its
consequences (risk management standard)
• probability that an actual return on an investment will be
lower than the expected return (finance)
• (Exposure to) the possibility of loss, injury, or other adverse or
unwelcome circumstance; a chance or situation involving such
a possibility (Oxford English Dictionary, 1655)
4. risk definition
• The first symbol is the symbol for “danger”, while the second
is the symbol for “opportunity”, making risk a mix of danger
and opportunity
5. Risk in general
• possibility of loss or injury
– something could be lost / injuried by accident or misfortune
• potential for a negative impact
– something could go wrong
• likelihood of an undesirable event
– some event may cause negative influence
6. upside of risk
• risk provides the basis for opportunity
• not only negative or downside:
– risk of not meeting our goals
– risk of missing an opportunity
– risk of not recognising that something good is happening
• results may be better or worse than expected
• the upside of risk is the reason for accepting
exposures and opportunities
7.
8. risk/return trade-off
• the balance between the desire for the lowest
possible risk and the highest possible return
• no risk / low risk = low return
• the higher risk means the possibility of higher returns
• Preferred trade-off depends on risk tolerance / risk
appetite
9. Risk vs uncertainty
• risk - variability that can be quantified in terms of
probabilities
• uncertainty - variability that cannot be quantified at
all
In effect there is need for clarity of degree to which the
results depend on statistically measurable risk and to which
depend on factors that are entirely uncertain at the time of
the analysis.
13. Risk sources – where risk comes from
• organization environment events, changes or trends
• organization’s exposure to changes in market
• actions and transactions of the organization
• avoiding necessary actions
• failures of the organization, particularly
people, processes, and systems
• hazard or natural events
16. History of risk
• games of chance and hazard has been popular since accient
times (as far as Egypt 3500 BC)
• until the Renaissance that no “scientific” or statistical basis for
gambling was presented
– arabic numerc system 0-9 digits between X-XII,
– treated as secret knowledge)
• In middle ages in Europe word ‘risicum’ used in context of sea
trade
• English word ‘risk’ comes from old French word risqué -
“danger, in which there is an element of chance”
16
17. History of risk (II)
• In XVI Girolamo Cardano (physician, gambler, and
mathematician) wrote a book titled, Liber de Ludo Aleae
(“Book on Games of Chance”) - first study of probability in
games of that kind
• Galileo Sopra le Scoperte dei Dadi (“On Playing Dice”) (1630)
• In XVII basics of probability theory by Pierre de Fermat, Blaise
Pascal and Christiaan Huygens
• In XVIII basics of statistics theory developed by Pierre-Simon
Laplace, Joseph Lagrange or Daniel Bernoulli
• In XIX moder statistics thoery introduced (Carl Gauss and
many others)
17
18. History of risk (III)
• In XX modern probability theory by Andrey Nikolaevich
Kolmogorov
• In XX risk introduced into finance as first rating agencies
emerged in US (i.e. Moody’s at 1906)
• Frank Knight book “Risk, Uncertainty and Profit” (1921)
• Scenario analysis matured during cold war
• Risk management as discipline became popular in ’60 of XX –
starting with hazard risk management
• Scientific approach to risk in finance introduced in ‘60 (with
CAPM model) and become popular in ‘80 (derivatives, ERM)
• Computers revolutionized risk studies in late ‘90s
18