Examples of Risk Aversion in the following topics:
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- In the realm of finance and economics, Risk Aversion is a concept that addresses how people will react to a situation with uncertain outcomes.
- It attempts to measure the tolerance for risk and uncertainty.
- People fall under different categories of risk aversion.
- A risk-averse, or risk avoiding person would take the guaranteed payment of 50, or even less than that (40 or 30) depending on how risk averse they are.
- A risk neutral person would be indifferent between taking the gamble or the guaranteed money.
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- Since planned actions are subject to large cost and benefit risks, proper risk assessment and risk management for such actions are crucial to making them successful.
- As risk carries so many different meanings, there are many formal methods used to assess or to "measure" risk.
- In enterprise risk management, a risk is defined as a possible event or circumstance that can have negative influences on the enterprise in question.
- In a financial institution, enterprise risk management is normally thought of as the combination of credit risk, interest rate risk or asset liability management, market risk, and operational risk.
- In project management, risk management can include: planning how risk will be managed, assigning a risk officer, maintaining a database of live risks, and preparing risk mitigation plans.
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- IT risk relates to the business risk associated with the use, ownership, operation, involvement, and adoption of IT within an enterprise.
- Risk is the product of the likelihood of an occurrence times its impact (Risk = Likelihood x Impact).
- IT risk management can be viewed as a component of a wider enterprise risk management (ERM) system.
- IT risk transverses all four of the aforementioned categories and should be managed within the framework of enterprise risk management.
- Risk appetite and risk sensitivity of the whole enterprise should guide the IT risk management process.
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- Risk management (i.e. foreign exchange risks, interest rates, hedging commodities, derivatives)
- Credit Risk – Risk that a borrower may not return the entirety of the payment owed.
- Liquidity Risk – Risk that an acquired asset cannot be traded quickly enough to capture profit.
- Market Risk – Virtually any capital asset has a market, and is therefore subjected to the risks of it's respective market.
- Operational Risk – Risk that an operational issue will diminish returns.
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- Reinvestment risk is the risk that a bond is repaid early, and an investor has to find a new place to invest with the risk of lower returns.
- Reinvestment risk is one of the main genres of financial risk.
- Reinvestment risk is more likely when interest rates are declining.
- Pension funds are also subject to reinvestment risk.
- Two factors that have a bearing on the degree of reinvestment risk are:
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- Prepayment risk is the risk that the buyer goes ahead and pays off the mortgage.
- Credit risk or default risk, is the risk that a borrower will default (or stop making payments).
- Liquidity risk is the risk that an asset or security cannot be converted into cash in a timely manner.
- Operational risk is another type of risk that deals with the operations of a particular business.
- Foreign investment risk involves the risk associated with investments in foreign markets.
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- Price risk is positively correlated to changes in interest rates, while reinvestment risk is inversely correlated.
- Price risk and reinvestment risk both represent the uncertainty associated with the effects of changes in market interest rates.
- So there is little reinvestment risk.
- There is, accordingly, more reinvestment risk.
- In summary, price risk and reinvestment risk are two main financial risks resulting from changes in interest rates.
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- Aversion therapy is a type of behavior therapy designed to encourage individuals to give up undesirable habits by causing them to associate the habit with an unpleasant effect.
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- Overall riskiness of an asset is composed of its own individual risk (beta) along with its risk in relation to the market as a whole.
- A certain amount of risk is inherent in any investment.
- Systemic risk is the risk associated with an entire financial system or entire market.
- On the other hand, unsystematic risk is risk to which only specific classes of securities or industries are vulnerable.
- The term risk premium refers to the amount by which an asset's expected rate of return exceeds the risk free rate.