The COSO Framework for Internal Control
February 12, 2025
Leaders are responsible for creating and realizing the vision by encouraging the followers to work towards the fulfilment of a common goal. Effective leaders should be able to have a perfect assessment of their strengths/weaknesses and deal with it efficiently. By adopting remedial measures, they should reinforce their areas of strengths and overcome their deficiencies. […]
Employees are the assets of every organization and its success is directly proportional to the hard work every employee puts in. Individuals must work in a little different and smarter way than the others and always feel motivated to give their best. Effort by a single team member goes unnoticed and every team member should […]
Management of Nonprofits By definition, the nonprofit sector operates in the humanitarian goals and objectives space. This means that many nonprofits are loosely structured and are often volunteer driven without formal hierarchies and patterns of management. However, this does not mean that nonprofits need not have formal boards, management structures, and financial control. The point […]
Crisis refers to sudden unplanned events which cause major disturbances in the organization and trigger a feeling of fear and threat amongst the employees. Following are the types of crisis: Natural Crisis Disturbances in the environment and nature lead to natural crisis. Such events are generally beyond the control of human beings. Tornadoes, Earthquakes, Hurricanes, […]
Why Spirituality and Business are not incompatible and what Buddhism can teach us? Often, we think that spirituality and business are mutually incompatible and hence, are separate and distinct means to ends. While the former preaches abstinence and rejection of worldly pleasures, the latter focuses on making money as the end to which all means […]
Credit derivatives were created in order to transfer the credit risk inherent in an instrument from one party to another without actually transferring the ownership of these assets. Prior to credit derivatives, there was no mechanism to isolate the credit risk of any financial instrument.
Credit default swaps were amongst the first structured finance derivative products which were created to help mitigate credit risks. Over the years, the market for credit default swaps has exploded and now the total outstanding value of derivative contracts is more than $10 trillion!
In this article, we will have a closer look at what a credit default swap is and how it helps in managing the credit risk in any portfolio.
The simplest way to describe a credit default swap is by comparing it to an insurance contract. An insurance contract typically has an “insurer” i.e. a person who provides protection as well as an “insured” i.e. a person who seeks protection. This is also the case with credit default swaps.
There are two parties involved wherein one seeks protection and the other provides it. However, they are not referred to as the insurer and the insured. Here, the protection is being sought against different types of credit events viz. bankruptcy, downgrade, and defaults.
As a part of this contract, the person buying the protection owns the underlying asset. However, they pay a premium to the seller of the protection. This premium is paid in lieu of the contractual obligation that the seller will make good their loss if any credit event takes place. The seller of the credit default swap normally does not hold any position in the underlying economy.
Over the years, many versions of credit default swaps have been introduced into the financial market. The details of some of these versions are as follows:
Credit default swaps can also be segregated based on their maturity. CDSs can have a duration from one year to a decade. However, the contracts sold with 5 years duration are the ones that are most commonly traded on the exchange.
Credit-default swaps have grown in popularity because there are certain benefits of using them. Some of them have been listed below:
Most credit default swaps are settled in one of the two ways mentioned below:
The bottom line is that over the years, credit default swaps have become one of the most widely used financial derivatives. However, that has also caused many problems. Initially, the products were created to manage risks. However, over time they started being used for speculative purposes and ended up magnifying the risk in the system.
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *