Managing Bank Capital: Capital Allocation and Performance Measurement, 2nd Edition this question feed

asked by nutshell on November 3, 2006 8:39 AM
Managing Bank Capital explains proven techniques available in the management of bank capital that will help maximize shareholder value. This second edition has been fully updated to incorporate significant developments, such as the modeling of credit risk, and includes new sections with more technical information and advanced analysis.


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I bought this book hoping it would quickly bring me up to speed on key concepts in Economic Capital in the financial institutions industry. This book was simple enough for a relative novice to follow, and went into enough detail that I think most people would get something out of it. I also thought the book was well organized-- each section had a summary chapter that explained what the subsequent chapters in that section would cover so you could quickly skim or deep dive on various topics. The book was a bit dated in the sections on Basel, since it was written before Basel II was completed. Overall, an excellent introduction to Economic Capital and I was happy with my purchase.
reviewed by runaway on November 6, 2006 5:28 PM

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With all the attention paid to bank capital management, this book is helpful in describing the concepts. However, it is not quantitative enough. The step-by-step of capital allocation for a given asset class of varying risk levels is lacking. For example, how should the bank treat the sub-prime portion of its credit card or auto loans in the capital allocation? I wish it were more specific. Could Providian or Capital One have directed the capital away from high risk loans, had they followed the advice of the book?
reviewed by gilbert on November 26, 2006 9:30 AM

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Chris Matten provides a comprehensive guide to applications of RAROC and shareholder value for managing bank capital and compensating bank executives and traders. The author provides particularly good sections on how EVA, shareholder value, and other earnings based measures can be manipulated and abused. This is not the sort of book which the corporate finance shareholder value crowd would likely read, but is one which they need to read.
reviewed by ronmiller on November 27, 2006 9:11 PM

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