FRM 2018 SG
FRM 2018 SG
FRM 2018 SG
FRM
STUDY GUIDE
Key concepts appear as bullet points at the beginning FRM EXAM PREP PROVIDERS
of each section and are intended to help candidates Some candidates may want to more formally review the
identify the major themes and knowledge areas materials with FRM Exam Preparation Providers (EPPs).
associated with that section. A list of EPPs that have registered with GARP can be
found on the GARP website. GARP does not endorse any
FRM EXAM APPROACH EPP but merely lists them as a service to FRM candidates.
The FRM Exams are practice-oriented. The questions are
derived from a combination of theory, as set forth in the
readings, and real-world work experience. Candidates
are expected to understand risk management concepts
and approaches, as well as the ways in which they would
apply to a risk managers day-to-day activities. It is
rare that a risk manager will be faced with an issue that
can immediately be slotted into one category. In the
real world, a risk manager must be able to identify any
number of risk-related issues and be able to deal with
them effectively. As such, the Exams are comprehensive
in nature, testing a candidate on a number of risk
management concepts and approaches.
On the following pages, an asterisk after a reading title indicates that the reading is freely available on the GARP website.
garp.org/frm 1
Foundations of Risk Management
FRM EXAM PART I
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed on the following page. While detailed
learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives document, a
brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
Reading 1 contains three chapters with the first two giving a broad overview of risk, different risk types, and how
risks can arise in an organization. The third chapter describes the role of corporate governance in risk management
including the role of the board of directors and other areas of an organization. The concept of an organizations risk
appetite and how this is translated into a risk appetite framework and communicated throughout an organization
is presented as well. Reading 2 introduces Enterprise Risk Management (ERM), a common and important method
for assessing and managing risk in an organizational context. Reading 3 focuses more specifically on risk taking by
banks and how risk management can add or destroy value in these institutions.
As it is always important to learn from history, the next several readings (Readings 4, 5, and 6) describe various
financial disasters from the past with a particular focus on the recent global financial crisis. Reading 7 gives a
nuanced approach to interpreting financial failures and the role that risk management may, or may not, have played
in them.
Reading 8 presents the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), one of the foundational developments in risk-adjusted
pricing and valuation. This is followed by a discussion, in Reading 9, of several commonly used CAPM-related risk
measures and their application to performance measurement. Reading 10 moves beyond CAPM and introduces
factor models and how they can be used to model returns.
Data is the lifeblood of many large financial organizations and aggregating and reporting risk data has become
increasingly important. Reading 11 addresses this important topic. To help ensure ethical standards are upheld in the
risk management profession, Reading 12 contains GARPs Code of Conduct, a document that all FRMs are subject to.
2. James Lam, Enterprise Risk Management: From Incentives to Controls, 2nd Edition (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley &
Sons, 2014).
Chapter 4. What is ERM?
3. Ren Stulz, Risk Management, Governance, Culture and Risk Taking in Banks, FRBNY Economic Policy
Review, (August 2016): 43-59.
4. Steve Allen, Financial Risk Management: A Practitioners Guide to Managing Market and Credit Risk, 2nd Edition
(New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 2013).
Chapter 4. Financial Disasters
5. Markus K. Brunnermeier, 2009. Deciphering the Liquidity and Credit Crunch 20072008, Journal of
Economic Perspectives 23:1, 77100.
6. Gary Gorton and Andrew Metrick, 2012. Getting Up to Speed on the Financial Crisis: A One-Weekend-
Readers Guide, Journal of Economic Literature 50:1, 128150.
7. Ren Stulz, Risk Management Failures: What Are They and When Do They Happen? Fisher College of
Business Working Paper Series, October 2008.
8. Edwin J. Elton, Martin J. Gruber, Stephen J. Brown and William N. Goetzmann, Modern Portfolio Theory and
Investment Analysis, 9th Edition (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2014).
Chapter 13. The Standard Capital Asset Pricing Model
9. Noel Amenc and Veronique Le Sourd, Portfolio Theory and Performance Analysis (West Sussex, UK: John
Wiley & Sons, 2003).
Chapter 4. Applying the CAPM to Performance Measurement: Single-Index Performance Measurement
Indicators (Section 4.2 only)
10. Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane, and Alan J. Marcus, Investments, 10th Edition (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2013).
Chapter 10. Arbitrage Pricing Theory and Multifactor Models of Risk and Return
11. Principles for Effective Data Aggregation and Risk Reporting, (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
Publication, January 2013).
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed on the following page. While detailed
learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives document, a
brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
Reading 13 consists of five chapters. These chapters introduce basic, fundamental concepts related to probability,
statistics, probability distributions, Bayesian analysis, hypothesis testing, and confidence intervals.
Regression analysis is an important statistical tool used to investigate relationships between variables. The first
three chapters in Reading 14 give a general introduction to regression analysis. These chapters cover both single and
multiple variable linear regression analysis. The fourth chapter presents methods for quantifying the estimation error
associated with ordinary least squares regression and how to structure and evaluate tests of statistical hypotheses.
Time series data occur frequently in finance. The four chapters in Reading 15 describe methods for analyzing time
series data in order to estimate statistics and extract other meaningful characteristics of the data. The first chapter
focuses on modeling and forecasting trends. The second chapter focuses on modeling and forecasting seasonality.
The last two chapters focus on modeling cycles.
The two chapters in Reading 16 introduce volatility, correlation and copulas and how to use the EWMA model and the
GARCH(1,1) model to estimate future covariance and volatilities.
Simulation methods in finance are used to value and analyze complex financial instruments and portfolios. Reading
17 introduces simulation methods including Monte Carlo simulation and the use of the bootstrapping method. It also
explains the advantages and disadvantages of the simulation approach to financial problem solving and the
techniques to reduce Monte Carlo sampling error.
14. James Stock and Mark Watson, Introduction to Econometrics, Brief Edition (Boston, MA: Pearson, 2008).
Chapter 4. Linear Regression with One Regressor
Chapter 5. Regression with a Single Regressor
Chapter 6. Linear Regression with Multiple Regressors
Chapter 7. Hypothesis Tests and Confidence Intervals in Multiple Regression
15. Francis X. Diebold, Elements of Forecasting, 4th Edition (Mason, OH: Cengage Learning, 2006).
Chapter 5. Modeling and Forecasting Trend
Chapter 6. Modeling and Forecasting Seasonality
Chapter 7. Characterizing Cycles
Chapter 8. Modeling Cycles: MA, AR, and ARMA Models
16. John C. Hull, Risk Management and Financial Institutions, 4th Edition (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2015).
Chapter 10. Volatility
Chapter 11. Correlations and Copulas
17. Chris Brooks, Introductory Econometrics for Finance, 3rd Edition (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University
Press, 2014).
Chapter 13. Simulation Methods (Note: EViews and other programming references are not required.)
garp.org/frm 5
Financial Markets and Products
FRM EXAM PART I
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed beginning on the following page. While
detailed learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives
document, a brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
Reading 18 has three chapters. The first chapter describes the structure of commercial and investment banking, the
way banks are regulated, the nature of risks facing them, and the role of capital in providing cushion against losses.
The second chapter explains the risks and regulation faced by insurance companies, their capital requirements
and performance ratios, and the types and key characteristics of pension funds. The third chapter introduces
mutual funds and hedge funds, examines their key differences, and describes various hedge fund strategies and
performance measures.
Financial derivatives play a key role in risk management and their coverage is the basis of Reading 19, which has
eleven chapters. Chapters 1 through 3 describe options, forwards, and futures and explain the mechanics of futures
markets and central counterparties, and the hedging strategies using futures. Chapters 4 through 6 describe interest
rates and interest rate sensitivity, the determination of forward and futures prices, and the use of interest rate futures
in hedging. The mechanics, types, and the pricing of swaps contracts and the application of swaps for hedging are
described in Chapter 7. The next four chapters explain the mechanics of options markets, and the hedging strategies
involving options and exotic options. Reading 20 concludes the discussion on derivatives, defines basis risk,
describes commodity forwards and futures, explains the role of carry markets, and describes the determination of
the no-arbitrage values for commodity forwards and futures.
Reading 21 describes the structures and operations of central counterparties (CCPs). The exchange-traded and over-
the-counter (OTC) markets are explained along with the types of risks faced by CCPs. Reading 22 describes foreign
exchange risk and explains interest rate parity theorem, balance-sheet hedging, and the diversification benefits of
multicurrency asset-liability positions.
The last two readings examine two important classes of fixed income securities. Reading 23 describes corporate
bonds, their types and characteristics, and the distinctions between credit default risk and credit spread risk.
Reading 24 defines mortgages, explains the securitization process for mortgage-backed securities, and describes
prepayment modeling and the calculation of the various metrics for a typical mortgage pool.
19. John C. Hull, Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives, 10th Edition (New York, NY: Pearson, 2017).
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Futures Markets and central counterparties
Chapter 3. Hedging Strategies Using Futures
Chapter 4. Interest Rates
Chapter 5. Determination of Forward and Futures Prices
Chapter 6. Interest Rate Futures
Chapter 7. Swaps
Chapter 10. Mechanics of Options Markets
Chapter 11. Properties of Stock Options
Chapter 12. Trading Strategies Involving Options
Chapter 26. Exotic Options
20. Robert McDonald, Derivatives Markets, 3rd Edition (Boston, MA: Addison-Wesley, 2013).
Chapter 6. Commodity Forwards and Futures
21. Jon Gregory, Central Counterparties: Mandatory Clearing and Bilateral Margin Requirements for OTC
Derivatives (New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 2014).
Chapter 2. Exchanges, OTC Derivatives, DPCs and SPVs
Chapter 3. Basic Principles of Central Clearing
Chapter 14. (section 14.4 only). Risks Caused by CCPs: Risks Faced by CCPs
22. Anthony Saunders and Marcia Millon Cornett, Financial Institutions Management: A Risk Management
Approach, 8th Edition (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2014).
Chapter 13. Foreign Exchange Risk
23. Frank Fabozzi (editor), The Handbook of Fixed Income Securities, 8th Edition (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2012).
Chapter 12. Corporate Bonds
24. Bruce Tuckman and Angel Serrat, Fixed Income Securities: Tools for Todays Markets, 3rd Edition (Hoboken, NJ:
John Wiley & Sons, 2011).
Chapter 20. Mortgages and Mortgage-Backed Securities
garp.org/frm 7
Valuation and Risk Models
FRM EXAM PART I
} Value-at-Risk (VaR)
} Expected shortfall (ES)
} Stress testing and scenario analysis
} Option valuation
} Fixed income valuation
} Hedging
} Country and sovereign risk models and management
} External and internal credit ratings
} Expected and unexpected losses
} Operational risk
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed on the following page. While detailed
learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives document, a
brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
Reading 25 consists of two chapters that introduce Value-at-Risk (VaR) estimation approaches and applications.
Reading 26 covers financial risk measures and examines measurement frameworks such as the mean-variance
approach, VaR, and expected shortfall (ES).
The three chapters that comprise Reading 27 present the key elements of option pricing and option sensitivities.
Option valuation using binominal trees and the Black-Scholes-Merton model is covered, along with the use of options
for hedging and risk management.
The five chapters that form Reading 28 are devoted to valuing and understanding risk management for fixed income
securities. The first three chapters cover the various tools of fixed income valuation while the last two chapters cover
risk metrics and hedging.
Reading 29 explains the specific sources of country risk and the use of external ratings in assessing sovereign default
risk. A description of credit ratings, both external and internal, is further developed in the next reading. Reading 30
presents a review of external and internal rating methodologies and an assessment of the strengths and weaknesses
of the rating methodologies.
The next two readings foreshadow two very important exam topics covered in Part II. Reading 31 presents the basics
of credit risk, specifically expected loss (EL) and unexpected loss (UL) for both an individual security and a portfolio.
Reading 32 introduces various aspects of operational risk. Stress testing, its importance, applications, and practices
are explained in Readings 33 and 34.
26. Kevin Dowd, Measuring Market Risk, 2nd Edition (West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons, 2005).
Chapter 2. Measures of Financial Risk
27. John C. Hull, Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives, 10th Edition (New York, NY: Pearson, 2017).
Chapter 13. Binomial Trees
Chapter 15. The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Chapter 19. The Greek Letters
28. Bruce Tuckman and Angel Serrat, Fixed Income Securities: Tools for Todays Markets, 3rd Edition (Hoboken, NJ:
John Wiley & Sons, 2011).
Chapter 1. Prices, Discount Factors, and Arbitrage
Chapter 2. Spot, Forward and Par Rates
Chapter 3. Returns, Spreads and Yields
Chapter 4. One-Factor Risk Metrics and Hedges
Chapter 5. Multi-Factor Risk Metrics and Hedges
29. Aswath Damodaran, Country Risk: Determinants, Measures and Implications - The 2017 Edition (July 19, 2017).
(Pages 1-47 only).
30. Arnaud de Servigny and Olivier Renault, Measuring and Managing Credit Risk (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill,
2004).
Chapter 2. External and Internal Ratings
31. Gerhard Schroeck, Risk Management and Value Creation in Financial Institutions (New York, NY: John Wiley &
Sons, 2002).
Chapter 5. Capital Structure in Banks (Pages 170-186 only)
32. John C. Hull, Risk Management and Financial Institutions, 4th Edition (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2015).
Chapter 23. Operational Risk
33. Stress Testing: Approaches, Methods, and Applications, Edited by Akhtar Siddique and Iftekhar Hasan
(London, UK: Risk Books, 2013).
Chapter 1. Governance over Stress Testing
Chapter 2. Stress Testing and Other Risk Management Tools
34. Principles for sound stress testing practices and supervision (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
Publication, May 2009).
garp.org/frm 9
Market Risk Measurement and Management
FRM EXAM PART II
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed on the following page. While detailed
learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives document, a
brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
The importance of developing an understanding of VaR and other common risk measures used to assess risk cannot
be overstated. Reading 35 presents both parametric and non-parametric estimation techniques for VaR and ES.
Backtesting as a form of model validation as support for the use of VaR and VaR mapping as a tool to address
portfolio risk factors are presented in the two chapters of Reading 36. Reading 37 completes the risk measures
coverage by showing the uses and applications of VaR and ES in a trading book context and also addresses some of
the recent academic literature associated with market risk management.
Modern risk management requires an understanding of correlation risk. Reading 38 explains the basics of correlation
risk and explores the empirical properties, models, and modeling approaches related to correlation risk. The first
chapter covers the basics of correlation risk and how it is related to credit risk, market risk, systematic risk, and
concentration risk. The second chapter includes how correlations behave in different economic states as well as
mean reversion and autocorrelation. The third chapter demonstrates how to apply statistical correlation models.
The last chapter explains the purpose and uses of copula functions.
The five chapters in Reading 39 all are associated with term structure models and their impact on hedging. Various
regression hedges are explained in the first chapter. Term structure models that deal with drifts, mean reversions,
negative short-term rates, and time dependent volatilities are all reviewed. Specific term structure models, such as
the Ho-Lee, Vasicek, Cox-Ingersoll-Ross, and lognormal models are discussed in this reading.
Reading 40 covers very specific concepts related to the occurrence of volatility smiles.
36. Philippe Jorion, Value-at-Risk: The New Benchmark for Managing Financial Risk, 3rd Edition (New York, NY:
McGraw-Hill, 2007).
Chapter 6. Backtesting VaR
Chapter 11. VaR Mapping
37. Messages from the academic literature on risk measurement for the trading book, Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision, Working Paper No. 19, Jan 2011.
38. Gunter Meissner, Correlation Risk Modeling and Management (New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 2014).
Chapter 1. Some Correlation Basics: Properties, Motivation, Terminology
Chapter 2. Empirical Properties of Correlation: How Do Correlations Behave in the Real World?
Chapter 3. Statistical Correlation ModelsCan We Apply Them to Finance?
Chapter 4. Financial Correlation ModelingBottom-Up Approaches (Sections 4.3.0 (intro), 4.3.1, and 4.3.2 only)
39. Bruce Tuckman and Angel Serrat, Fixed Income Securities: Tools for Todays Markets, 3rd Edition (Hoboken, NJ:
John Wiley & Sons, 2011).
Chapter 6. Empirical Approaches to Risk Metrics and Hedging
Chapter 7. The Science of Term Structure Models
Chapter 8. The Evolution of Short Rates and the Shape of the Term Structure
Chapter 9. The Art of Term Structure Models: Drift
Chapter 10. The Art of Term Structure Models: Volatility and Distribution
40. John C. Hull, Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives, 10th Edition (New York, NY: Pearson, 2017).
Chapter 20. Volatility Smiles
garp.org/frm 11
Credit Risk Measurement and Management
FRM EXAM PART II
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed on the following page. While detailed
learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives document, a
brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
Reading 41 includes two chapters that introduce the key themes of credit risk management. The first chapter
discusses the components of credit risk, types of credit risk analysis, credit risk measurements, and factors that
cause credit risk. The second chapter describes various credit analyst roles and research skills expected of a credit
risk analyst. The role of ratings in supporting credit risk management and rating assignment methodologies are
discussed in the two chapters of Reading 42. The first chapter explains drivers and classifications of credit risk and
conditions necessary for value creation, subject to capital requirements. The second chapter describes the key
features of a good rating system, relates ratings to the probability of default, and analyzes different approaches to
predicting default. Reading 43 describes different approaches to credit risk modeling and assesses credit derivatives.
Reading 44 includes three chapters that cover portfolio and structured credit risk. The first chapter describes default
intensity models, explains credit spread risk, and defines the relationship between a default probability and a hazard
rate. The second chapter defines default correlation for credit portfolios and assesses the impact of correlation on
credit VaR. The third chapter describes common types of structured products, the mechanics of a securitization, and
explains how default sensitivities for tranches are measured.
Counterparty risk is covered in eight chapters that form Reading 45. The first three chapters identify ways of
managing and mitigating counterparty risk and describe the effects of netting, close-out, and collateral on
credit exposure. The fourth chapter describes credit exposure and funding, and this is followed by chapters on
counterparty risk intermediation and default probabilities, credit spreads, and funding costs. The last two chapters
cover the determination of credit exposure and the pricing of and exposure profiles for derivative contracts and two
chapters covering the analysis of credit and debt value adjustments and the concept of wrong-way risk. Reading 46
describes stress tests on CVA and the calculation of Debt Value Adjustment (DVA).
Reading 47 defines and compares the risk management and scoring models of retail and corporate credit risk.
Reading 48 describes Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) and explains performance analysis tools for securitized
structures. Finally, Reading 49 examines the subprime mortgage credit securitization process in the US and explains
the implications of credit ratings on subprime mortgage backed securities.
42. Giacomo De Laurentis, Renato Maino, and Luca Molteni, Developing, Validating and Using Internal Ratings
(West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons, 2010).
Chapter 2. Classifications and Key Concepts of Credit Risk
Chapter 3. Ratings Assignment Methodologies
43. Ren Stulz, Risk Management & Derivatives (Florence, KY: Thomson South-Western, 2002).
Chapter 18. Credit Risks and Credit Derivatives
44. Allan Malz, Financial Risk Management: Models, History, and Institutions (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2011).
Chapter 7. Spread Risk and Default Intensity Models
Chapter 8. Portfolio Credit Risk (Sections 8.1, 8.2, 8.3 only)
Chapter 9. Structured Credit Risk
45. Jon Gregory, The xVA Challenge: Counterparty Credit Risk, Funding, Collateral, and Capital (West Sussex, UK:
John Wiley & Sons, 2015).
Chapter 4. Counterparty Risk
Chapter 5. Netting, Close-out and Related Aspects
Chapter 6. Collateral
Chapter 7. Credit Exposure and Funding
Chapter 9. Counterparty Risk Intermediation
Chapter 12. Default Probabilities, Credit Spreads, Funding Costs
Chapter 14. Credit and Debt Value Adjustment
Chapter 17. Wrong-way Risk
46. Stress Testing: Approaches, Methods, and Applications, Edited by Akhtar Siddique and Iftekhar Hasan
(London, UK: Risk Books, 2013).
Chapter 4. The Evolution of Stress Testing Counterparty Exposures
47. Michel Crouhy, Dan Galai and Robert Mark, The Essentials of Risk Management, 2nd Edition (New York, NY:
McGraw-Hill, 2014).
Chapter 9. Credit Scoring and Retail Credit Risk Management
Chapter 12. The Credit Transfer Markets-and Their Implications
48. Moorad Choudhry, Structured Credit Products: Credit Derivatives & Synthetic Securitization, 2nd Edition
(New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 2010).
Chapter 12. An Introduction to Securitization
49. Adam Ashcraft and Til Schuermann, Understanding the Securitization of Subprime Mortgage Credit, Federal
Reserve Bank of New York Staff Reports, No. 318 (March 2008).
garp.org/frm 13
Operational and Integrated Risk Management
FRM EXAM PART II
} Principles for sound operational risk management } Risk-adjusted return on capital (RAROC)
} Enterprise Risk Management (ERM) and } Economic capital frameworks and capital planning
enterprise-wide risk governance } Liquidity risk measurement and management
} IT infrastructure and data quality } Failure mechanics of dealer banks
} Internal and external operational loss data } Stress testing banks
} Methods of determining operational risk capital } Third-party outsourcing risk
for regulatory purposes } Risks related to money laundering and financing
} Model risk and model validation of terrorism
} Extreme value theory (EVT) } Regulation and the Basel Accords
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed beginning on the following page. While
detailed learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives, a
brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
Readings 50 through 53 cover operational risk governance and ERM, including recommended principles to manage
operational risk, governance principles for risk appetite frameworks, and data quality management. Readings 54 and
55 discuss methods of measuring and reporting operational losses and the use of internal and external operational
loss data. The second chapter in Reading 55 as well as Reading 56 present methods of measuring operational
risk capital recommended by the Basel Committee. (As there has recently been a major change proposed to this
approach, both the old methods are presented in Reading 55 as well as the new proposal in Reading 56.)
Readings 57 and 58 present issues related to modeling extreme losses, identifying and mitigating model risk, and
validating models. Reading 59 introduces capital planning and risk-adjusted return on capital, while readings 60 and
61 extend the discussion by presenting best practices in capital planning.
The important subject of liquidity risk is covered in Readings 62 through 64. This includes the use of repurchase
agreements, liquidity adjustments to VaR, and methods to manage funding and transactions liquidity risk. Readings
65 and 66 present a discussion of how banks can prepare for and respond to periods of financial distress, including
stress testing approaches. The section concludes with a discussion of regulatory guidelines and requirements,
including guidelines for managing outsourcing risk in Reading 67, an overview of the Basel regulations in Reading 68,
and risks related to money laundering and financing of terrorism in Reading 69. For the interested candidate, the full
Basel regulation documents are presented as optional readings.
51. Brian Nocco and Ren Stulz, Enterprise Risk Management: Theory and Practice, Journal of Applied Corporate
Finance 18, No. 4 (2006): 820.
52. Observations on Developments in Risk Appetite Frameworks and IT Infrastructure, Senior Supervisors Group,
December 2010.
53. Anthony Tarantino and Deborah Cernauskas, Risk Management in Finance: Six Sigma and Other Next
Generation Techniques (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2009).
Chapter 3: Information Risk and Data Quality Management
54. Marcelo G. Cruz, Gareth W. Peters, and Pavel V. Shevchenko, Fundamental Aspects of Operational Risk and
Insurance Analytics: A Handbook of Operational Risk (New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons, 2015).
Chapter 2: OpRisk Data and Governance
55. Philippa X. Girling, Operational Risk Management: A Complete Guide to a Successful Operational Risk
Framework (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2013).
Chapter 8. External Loss Data
Chapter 12. Capital Modeling
56. Standardised Measurement Approach for operational risk - consultative document, (Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision Publication, March 2016).
57. Kevin Dowd, Measuring Market Risk, 2nd Edition (West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons, 2005).
Chapter 7. Parametric Approaches (II): Extreme Value
58. Giacomo De Laurentis, Renato Maino, Luca Molteni, Developing, Validating and Using Internal Ratings
(Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2010).
Chapter 5. Validating rating models
59. Michel Crouhy, Dan Galai and Robert Mark, The Essentials of Risk Management, 2nd Edition (New York, NY:
McGraw-Hill, 2014).
Chapter 15. Model Risk
Chapter 17. Risk Capital Attribution and Risk-Adjusted Performance Measurement
60. Range of practices and issues in economic capital frameworks, (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
Publication, March 2009).
61. Capital Planning at Large Bank Holding Companies: Supervisory Expectations and Range of Current Practice,
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, August 2013.
62. Bruce Tuckman and Angel Serrat, Fixed Income Securities: Tools for Todays Markets, 3rd Edition (Hoboken, NJ:
John Wiley & Sons, 2011).
Chapter 12. Repurchase Agreements and Financing
garp.org/frm 15
Readings for Operational and Integrated Risk Management
63. Kevin Dowd, Measuring Market Risk, 2nd Edition (West Sussex, UK: John Wiley & Sons, 2005).
Chapter 14. Estimating Liquidity Risks
64. Allan Malz, Financial Risk Management: Models, History, and Institutions (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2011).
Chapter 11. Assessing the Quality of Risk Measures (Section 11.1)
Chapter 12. Liquidity and Leverage
65. Darrell Duffie, 2010. The Failure Mechanics of Dealer Banks, Journal of Economic Perspectives 24:1, 51-72.
66. Til Schuermann, Stress Testing Banks, prepared for the Committee on Capital Market Regulation, Wharton
Financial Institutions Center (April 2012).
67. Guidance on Managing Outsourcing Risk, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, December 2013.
68. John Hull, Risk Management and Financial Institutions, 4th Edition (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2015).
Chapter 15. Basel I, Basel II, and Solvency II
Chapter 16. Basel II.5, Basel III, and Other Post-Crisis Changes
Chapter 17. Fundamental Review of the Trading Book
This chapter references the December 2014 proposal for the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book. The final version
is Minimum capital requirements for market risk and is listed below as an Optional Regulatory Reading for Reference.
69. Sound management of risks related to money laundering and financing of terrorism, (Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision, June 2017). (Pages 132 only)
Basel II: International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards: A Revised Framework
Comprehensive Version, (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision Publication, June 2006).*
Basel III: A global regulatory framework for more resilient banks and banking systemsrevised version, (Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision Publication, June 2011).*
Basel III: The Liquidity Coverage Ratio and liquidity risk monitoring tools, (Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision Publication, January 2013).*
Revisions to the Basel II market risk frameworkupdated as of 31 December 2010, (Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision Publication, February 2011).*
Basel III: The net stable funding ratio. (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision Publication, October 2014).*
Minimum capital requirements for market risk (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision Publication,
January 2016).*
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed beginning on the following page. While
detailed learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives
document, a brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
Reading 70 introduces the factor theory of investing, in which asset and portfolio returns and risk premiums are
explained by their exposure to specific factors. The first chapter describes the theory of factor risk by starting
with the basic single-factor risk premium theory the CAPM. The chapter then transitions into multifactor models.
The second chapter explains factors that drive risk premiums and compares two types of factors: fundamental-
based factors and investment-style factors. The third chapter explores how the sets of factors used to construct a
benchmark can affect portfolio alpha. The final chapter focuses on challenges in measuring performance for illiquid
assets, including potential biases in illiquid asset classes risk-adjusted returns and ways to address illiquidity in
performance reporting.
Value-at-Risk (VaR) is an important tool in portfolio management as it explicitly accounts for leverage and portfolio
diversification and provides a single measure of portfolio risk. The first chapter of Reading 72 explains how managers
can measure and manage portfolio VaR. The second chapter explains some benefits of using VaR in investment
management and introduces the process of risk budgeting.
As risk capital is a scarce resource, controls should exist to ensure that risk capital is used in a manner consistent
with the firms risk budget. Reading 73 explains how managers can develop a risk plan, provides some tools for risk
budgeting, and introduces some guidelines for monitoring portfolio risk.
Standardized measurements are helpful for investors in comparing the performance of asset managers. Reading 74
introduces various measures to evaluate the performance of portfolio managers.
Hedge funds are private investment vehicles not open to the general investing public. Reading 75 gives a general
introduction to hedge fund styles and Reading 76 describes the process of performing due diligence on funds and
fund managers as part of the investment process.
garp.org/frm 17
Readings for Risk Management and Investment Management
70. Andrew Ang, Asset Management: A Systematic Approach to Factor Investing (New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, 2014).
Chapter 6. Factor Theory
Chapter 7. Factors
Chapter 10. Alpha (and the Low-Risk Anomaly)
Chapter 13. Illiquid Assets
71. Richard Grinold and Ronald Kahn, Active Portfolio Management: A Quantitative Approach for Producing
Superior Returns and Controlling Risk, 2nd Edition (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2000).
Chapter 14. Portfolio Construction
72. Philippe Jorion, Value-at-Risk: The New Benchmark for Managing Financial Risk, 3rd Edition (New York, NY:
McGraw Hill, 2007).
Chapter 7. Portfolio Risk: Analytical Methods
Chapter 17. VaR and Risk Budgeting in Investment Management
73. Robert Litterman and the Quantitative Resources Group, Modern Investment Management: An Equilibrium
Approach (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2003).
Chapter 17. Risk Monitoring and Performance Measurement
74. Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane, and Alan J. Marcus, Investments, 10th Edition (New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2013).
Chapter 24. Portfolio Performance Evaluation
75. G. Constantinides, M. Harris and R. Stulz, eds., Handbook of the Economics of Finance, Volume 2B (Oxford, UK:
Elsevier, 2013).
Chapter 17. Hedge Funds
76. Kevin R. Mirabile, Hedge Fund Investing: A Practical Approach to Understanding Investor Motivation, Manager
Profits, and Fund Performance, 2nd Edition (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2016).
Chapter 12. Performing Due Diligence on Specific Managers and Funds
} Credit loss provisioning, IFRS 9/CECL } The failure of covered interest rate parity
} Machine learning and big data } FinTech credit
} Central clearing and risk transformation } Corporate culture
To cover these broad knowledge points, a set of curated readings is listed beginning on the following page. While
detailed learning objectives associated with these readings are presented in the 2018 FRM Learning Objectives
document, a brief summary of how to relate these readings to the knowledge points follows.
Reading 77 presents an overview of rules on loan loss provisioning standards and practices adopted by two major accounting
standard-setting bodies. The International Accounting Standards Board published the final version of International Financial
Reporting Standard 9 (IFRS 9) in 2014, and the US Financial Accounting Standards Board published its final provisioning
standard on Current Expected Credit Losses (CECL) in 2016. The reasons for provisioning expected credit losses,
the progress in banks implementation of these standards, and the impact on the financial system are considered.
Reading 78 focuses on the issues unique to big datasets and the different tools that may be required to manipulate and analyze
big data. Opportunities and areas for collaboration between econometrics and machine learning are discussed, including
causality and prediction. Machine learning methods to analyze large amounts of data and the application of machine learning
approaches within the financial services sector are further discussed in Reading 79. A background of machine learning and an
overview of machine learning methods are presented, and three areas of machine learning use are explored in this reading.
The next reading examines how the clearing of over-the-counter transactions through Central Counterparties (CCPs)
has affected risks in the financial system and whether central clearing has enhanced financial stability and reduced
systemic risk. Reading 80 discusses the transformation of counterparty risk into liquidity risk. An argument is made
that the main focus of risk management and financial stability analysis should be on the liquidity of clearing members
and the liquidity resources of CCPs.
Reading 81 argues that the link between banks and capital markets has gone global. Forced deleveraging and the
failure of Covered Interest Parity (CIP) are reviewed, followed by a discussion of the US dollars role as the measure
of the appetite for leverage, and the implications of a stronger dollar on financial stability and the real economy.
FinTech credit is the focus of Reading 82, particularly a study on how FinTech credit markets are likely to develop
and how they will affect the nature of credit provision and the traditional banking sector. The study analyzes the
functioning of FinTech credit markets and activities, assesses the potential microfinancial benefits and risks of these
activities, and considers the implications for financial stability in the event that FinTech credit grows to account for a
significant share of overall credit.
Reading 83 examines the role of culture in the context of financial risk management. The reading describes a specific
framework for analyzing culture in the context of financial practices and institutions, and the importance of culture
and whether it can be changed are addressed by applying the framework to five concrete situations.
garp.org/frm 19
Readings for Current Issues in Financial Markets
77. Cohen, Benjamin H. and Gerald A. Edwards, Jr., The new era of expected credit loss provisioning, BIS
Quarterly Review, March 20, 2017.*
78. Varian, Hal, Big Data: New Tricks for Econometrics, Journal of Economic Perspectives 28:2 (Spring 2014), 3-28.*
79. van Liebergen, Bart, Machine Learning: A Revolution in Risk Management and Compliance? Institute of
International Finance, April 2017.*
80. Cont, Rama, Central clearing and risk transformation, Norges Bank Research, March 2017.*
81. Song Shin, Hyun, The bank/capital markets nexus goes global, BIS Quarterly Review, November 2016.*
82. FinTech credit: Market structure, business models and financial stability implications. BISCommittee on
Global Financial Systems, May 2017.*
83. Lo, Andrew W., The Gordon Gekko Effect: The Role of Culture in the Financial Industry, Federal Reserve Bank
of New York Economic Policy Review, 22:1 (August 2016).*
Herv Geny................................................................................ Group Head of Internal Audit, London Stock Exchange Group
Keith Isaac, FRM...................................................................... VP, Capital Markets Risk Management, TD Bank Group
Dr. Victor Ng ............................................................................ MD, Chief Risk Architect, Market Risk Management and Analysis
Goldman Sachs
Liu Ruixia.................................................................................... Head of Risk Management, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China
garp.org/frm 21
Creating a culture of risk awareness
garp.org
The Global Association of Risk Professionals (GARP) is the leading
association dedicated to the education and certification of risk
professionals, connecting members in more than 190 countries and
territories. GARPs mission is to elevate the practice of risk management
at all levels, setting the industry standard through education, training,
media, and events.