Customers
Customers |
HypoVereinsbank takes control with SAS®European banking giant HypoVereinsbank (HVB) wanted to improve portfolio quality and control. In 2004, HVB created the Active Credit Portfolio Management (ACPM) Division to change the Corporates & Markets business division's credit portfolio management from "buying and storing" credits to active management. Portfolio managers needed a reliable way to actively control their portfolios. HVB is now using SAS to centralize its credit portfolio management while helping to diversify its holdings and avoid risk.
Data integration processes provide flexibility, speed and uniformity
When HVB decided to change the Corporates & Markets business division's credit portfolio from "buying and storing" credits to active management, it needed to provide its portfolio managers with a reliable way to control their portfolios. "In particular, we want to intensify the use of credit derivatives for hedging and for the targeted development of diversified risks, in order to improve the quality of the portfolio," explains Eckart Schröer, Director, Head of Information Management within the ACPM division. A further classic objective in portfolio management, according to Schröer, is the avoidance of risk concentrations (so-called 'clumps') and undesired correlations that could set in motion a domino effect on other business in the event of a credit failure.
Quantity and quality
With SAS, HVB has integrated credit portfolio management data that contains information from 75 difference sources. "We use information from DB2, Oracle, Sybase and flat files, running on MVS, Unix, OS/400 or Microsoft NT and XP operating systems. That is to say, we access practically all the systems that the IT world has ever produced," says Schröer. To create a consistent data management system, all the information is first stored temporarily in an operational data store (ODS). The ODS ensures the logical consistency of all the data and acts as the "single point of truth." In a second step, the data contained in the ODS is distributed across various data marts where it is kept available, in optimized form, for specific tasks and for evaluation.
Single point of control
The key figures that are held in the data marts include credit parameters (exposures), failure probabilities, expected loss, value at risk, equity tied up, RAROC (risk adjusted return on capital) and daily stock exchange evaluations of open items on the future market (market-to-market evaluations), plus various volatility parameters. The sources for these figures are the commercial corporate client business and front office trading systems, plus external sources that provide market and rating data. "Our division now works with a fully automated reliable database that provides transparency as regards the portfolio, risk distribution and market evaluation. So we can develop and implement portfolio strategies that look to the future," Schröer summarizes.
Better transparency
The most important objective was to replace programming with a uniform, transparent development process based on integrated metadata management. Schröer says the users accepted the new data environment very well. "The data foundation has become much broader since we started using SAS. And the portfolio managers have come to value the fact that additional data sources can be quickly integrated into processing." Benefits
Copyright © SAS Institute Inc. All Rights Reserved. |
HypoVereinsbank
Challenge:
Optimization of credit portfolio control to achieve transparent ETL processes for heterogeneous data sources.
Solution:
SAS Data Integration Studio running under SAS®9.
Benefits:
Risk/return optimization through the use of credit derivatives.
Data Volume:
Approximately 60 GB in the operational data store: approximately 6,000 data elements in 322 tables.
Number of users:
Approximately 130 (30 of whom are in portfolio management)
Platform:
Oracle 9i, Sun Solaris 10
Data sources:
75 extremely heterogeneous systems "We were amazed by the extremely short development time for our data integration environment...[and] impressed by the problem-free, transparent integration of the different data sources. No other supplier could have done this for us." Eckart Schröer, Director, Head of Information Management, ACPM Division Read more:
|