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At the Annual International Symposium on Derivatives and Risk Management,
Fordham University School of Law, New York, New York
October 8, 2002

Corporate Governance and Risk Management
I want to thank Dean Treanor and Alan Rechtschaffen for the invitation to participate in this
timely symposium on corporate governance issues. When I joined the Federal Reserve
Board of Governors last December, I knew I would be doing more than helping to set
short-term interest rates. While the general public and market focus on the decisions of the
Federal Open Market Committee, Board members spend much of their time on various
operating committees, focusing on payment and settlement systems, and the safety and
soundness of financial institutions and markets. But the rush of current events has meant
that I have spent less of my time dusting off my economics Ph.D. and more time using my
experience as a corporate chief financial officer, auditor, risk manager, and accountant, to
consider the policy issues of recent corporate control failures.
Today I want to focus on the role that risk management can play in strengthening corporate
governance from the point of view of boards of directors, management, and internal control
functions.
Managing Risks
The last decades of the twentieth century were, without a doubt, a period of dramatic
change in financial engineering, financial innovation, and risk-management practices.
Enterprise-wide risk management has been evolving as financial theory has advanced, new
technology has made modeling of risks more feasible, and innovation has helped to find
better ways to mitigate risk. Some types of risk are further along in the evolutionary process.
While there are many ways to categorize risk, I will use three broad categories for
illustration -- market, credit, and operating. Operating risk is the least developed, as
conceptual frameworks, metrics, and databases are still in preliminary stages. I will come
back to the issues surrounding operating risk in a few moments.
Market risk arguably has evolved the furthest because of the transparency of markets,
frequency of transactions, and financial engineering that can parse the various forms of risk
exposure so that appropriate financial instruments can be developed to hedge the specific
components of risk. The treasury functions of corporations routinely use models to assess
and manage price, interest rate, liquidity, and foreign exchange risk. As a result, managers
can better anticipate changes in revenue and expense due to these factors and develop
responses to their specific circumstances.
One tool for managing risk is securitization. Many of the assets on a firm's balance sheet,
such as receivables and customer leases, can now be securitized--that is, grouped into pools
and sold to outside investors. Securitization helps a firm manage the risk of a concentrated

exposure by transferring some of that exposure outside the firm. By pooling a diverse set of
assets and issuing marketable securities, firms obtain liquidity and reduce funding costs. Of
course, moving assets off the balance sheet and into special-purpose entities, with the
attendant creation of servicing rights and high-risk residual interests retained by firms,
generates its own risks.
Derivatives are another important tool for managing risk exposures. In the ordinary course
of business, firms are exposed to credit risk and the risk of price fluctuations in currency,
commodity, energy, and interest rate markets. For example, when an airline sells tickets
months before a flight, it becomes exposed to fluctuations in the price of jet fuel. A higher
price of jet fuel translates directly into lower profits and, perhaps, a greater risk of
bankruptcy. Firms can now use derivatives--options, futures, forwards, and so on--to
mitigate their exposure to some of these risks. The risk can be transferred to a counterparty
that is more willing to bear it. In my example, the airline could buy a forward contract or a
call option on jet fuel to hedge its risk and thereby increase its financial stability.
Another major category of risk is credit risk, which also has become much more quantified.
Models analyze a corporate customer's or borrower's probability of default, the loss in the
case of default, and the borrower's likely exposure at the time of default, taking into
consideration future draw-downs. The greater use of credit models in retail transactions
provides a stronger framework to assess risk and ensure that pricing reflects credit quality.
For consumer credit, however, models are less proven, since data collection and loss
estimates generally evolved after the 1990-91 recession and so have not been proven under
stress conditions or for subprime borrowers. Because many of these borrowers did not have
significant access to credit in previous recessions, their ultimate default rate in the current
cycle should help to validate the strength of the new statistical models.
For example, the health of financial institutions today reflects the improvement in the risk
management process that has been ongoing at banks for many years. Increasingly, the entire
risk management process has become more quantitative, reflecting not only the enhanced
ability and lower costs of collecting and processing data, but also improved techniques for
measuring and managing risk. The banking industry has been able to report record earnings
in the first half of this year, despite rising loan losses for large corporate credits and credit
cards. Banks have diversified their revenue streams to mitigate the impact on earnings
during credit cycles. And by improving risk management processes, bankers have learned to
identify risk exposures that exceed the target return on capital and sell, hedge, or use
controls to mitigate risk exposures.
Risk Assessment
As corporations grow larger and more diverse, it becomes more difficult for executive
management and boards of directors to monitor activity across the company. Directors,
particularly, do not have the time to understand all of the transactions occurring. Thus, a key
issue for boards and audit committees is how to focus their attention to the appropriate
areas. This is where a sound risk management and internal control framework can be very
helpful.
The Sarbanes-Oxley Act requires management to issue a report about the quality of internal
controls. A similar requirement was put into effect for banks in the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991. Since then, bankers have adopted
approaches along the lines of the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations' of the Treadway
Commission (COSO) Internal Control--Integrated Framework. This requires all managers,

at least once a year, to step back from other duties, and evaluate risks and controls. Each
manager considers current and planned operation changes, identifies the risks, and
determines appropriate mitigating controls and the effectiveness of those controls.
Managers then report their assessment up the chain of command to the chief executive
officer, with each new level of management in turn considering the risks and controls under
their responsibility. The external auditors attest to the results of this self-assessment in
banks, and results are reported to the audit committee of the board of directors. Thus, the
process helps management communicate among themselves and with the board about the
dynamic issues affecting risk exposures, risk appetites, and risk controls throughout the
corporation.
Risk assessments such as the one outlined in COSO's internal control framework presumably
could be useful in assessing the relative risk and returns from various lines of business when
formulating business strategies. But not all corporations and boards consider risk as a part of
their annual strategic planning or other evaluation processes.
A study conducted this year by the Institute of Internal Auditors and the National
Association of Corporate Directors showed that directors are not focusing on risk
management.1 Forty-five percent of directors surveyed said their organization did not have a
formal enterprise risk management process -- or any other formal method of identifying risk.
An additional 19 percent said that they were not sure whether their company had a formal
process for identifying risks.
Sound corporate governance is an essential element of a strong risk management process.
Governance involves many players, each with specific assigned responsibilities to ensure
that the system as a whole is sufficient to support the business strategy and ensure the
effectiveness of the systems of internal control.
Directors are not expected to understand every nuance of every line of business or to
oversee every transaction. They can look to management for that. They do, however, have
the responsibility to set the tone regarding their corporations' risk-taking and to oversee the
internal control processes so that they can reasonably expect that their directives will be
followed. They also have the responsibility to hire individuals who they believe have
integrity and can exercise a high level of judgment and competence. In the light of recent
events, I might add that directors have the further responsibility to periodically determine
whether their initial assessment of management's integrity was correct.
Indeed, beyond legal requirements, boards of directors and managers of all firms should
periodically test where they stand on ethical business practices. They should ask, for
example, "Are we getting by on technicalities, adhering to the letter but not the spirit of the
law? Are we compensating ourselves and others on the basis of contribution, or are we
taking advantage of our positions?"
Risk Management and Internal Controls
Boards of directors are responsible for ensuring that their organizations have an effective
audit process and that internal controls are adequate for the nature and scope of their
businesses. The reporting lines of the internal audit function should be such that the
information that directors receive is impartial and not unduly influenced by management.
Internal audit is a key element of management's responsibility to validate the strength of
internal controls.

Internal controls are the responsibility of line management. Line managers must determine
the level of risks they need to accept to run their businesses and to assure themselves that
the combination of earnings, capital, and internal controls is sufficient to compensate for the
risk exposures. Supporting functions such as accounting, internal audit, risk management,
credit review, compliance, and legal should independently monitor the control processes to
ensure that they are effective and that risks are measured appropriately. The results of these
independent reviews should be routinely reported to executive management and boards of
directors. Both executive management and directors should be sufficiently engaged in the
process to determine whether these reviews are in fact independent of the operating areas
under review and whether the officers conducting the reviews can, indeed, speak freely.
In many of the recent corporate and audit firm failures that have received public attention,
basic tenets of internal control, particularly those pertaining to operating risks, were not
followed.
Recent events should remind boards of directors, management, and auditors that internal
controls and sound governance become even more important when firms' operations move
into higher-risk areas. Indeed, when changes are happening, control failures often increase
significantly. Rapid growth, merger of operation centers, and introduction of new products
and delivery channels are examples of situations that put stress on the control environment.
When these types of changes occur, "people risks" rise. These are risks that are related to
training employees in new products and processes. Employees who join the organization
need to learn the culture of the company and the control environment. Employees unfamiliar
with their new responsibilities--the systems they use, the services they provide customers,
the oversight expected by supervisors and members of internal control functions--are all
more likely to create control breaks.
Rapid growth and change also modify the relative risks to an organization. New lines of
business may require different customer-qualification tests to meet the expected levels of
customer risk exposure. Further, the pressure to beat a competitor to market with new
products may shortcut the design-review process and omit an important control or allow a
programming error to adversely affect the software used to deliver the services.
Many of the companies that have been the center of recent governance failures demonstrate
some similar characteristics. They were lead by hard-charging entrepreneurs whose ability to
think outside the box pioneered advances in new lines of business. But the personalities of
these individuals, in many cases, led to a focus on sales growth and support and inadequate
time spent building the control infrastructure.
Another form of people risk is internal fraud. When expectations of the market and
supervisors, or pressures of personal life become overwhelming key officers may step over
the ethical and legal boundaries and cover up errors or purposely steal from the corporation.
While executive fraud is very difficult to detect, it is eventually discovered. Obviously,
during the past year, we've seen severe reactions to observed failures within
corporations--not only from investors and creditors, but also from lawmakers and regulators.
Although risk management has become much more quantitative, considerable management
judgement must be applied to the risk management process. Frequent, small losses can
generally be absorbed in the operating margin of the product or service. It is the
low-probability, large losses that provide the greatest challenge. And, it is just such risks--the

ones that can severely damage, if not kill, an organization--that too many enterprises do not
formally take into consideration.
When one looks at the extreme loss events for many types of operating risks, for example,
executive frauds, it is easy to recognize that the normal bell-shaped probability distribution
does not fit. Rather, the extremely long-or fat-tailed distributions emphasize that risk
management and internal control judgments must be applied. What is even more difficult, is
that some exposures can better be classed as uncertainties than as risks. That is, patterns of
losses, and risk drivers, are very hard to identify. Terrorist attacks, technology
breakthroughs, and other events that cannot be defined ahead of time often have significant
implications for the loss exposures of corporations.
Indeed, recent events have demonstrated that the complexity and size of modern
corporations create significant market risk exposures that give management and the board of
directors little time to react after serious breaches in internal controls become known.
Reputation risk, especially in a trust business like banking, can lead to loss of liquidity,
cancellation of major new contracts, and indictments, which bring the ultimate corporate
loss--failure of the firm. And as we have seen, the market's response can be harsh.
Risk Management and Disclosure
The intended or unintended consequences of the opaqueness that comes with complexity
raise serious issues for financial reporting and corporate governance. Effective governance
requires investors and creditors to hold firms accountable for their decisions. But they must
first have the information necessary to understand the risks that the firm is bearing and those
it has transferred to others. Here again, enterprise risk management can provide a framework
through which management and boards can convey appropriate information that will allow
outsiders to understand the company's risk exposures and how the company limits and
manages those risks.
Public disclosures by corporations need not follow a standard framework that is exactly the
same for all. Rather, we should insist that each entity disclose the information it believes its
stakeholders need to evaluate its risk profile. Each business line in a complex organization is
unique, and--to be most effective--the specific disclosures of its risks should be different,
too. Even in smaller organizations, disclosures should be tailored to reflect the activities of
the organization. A summary of the information that executive management and the board of
directors need to monitor the health of the enterprise is an excellent place to start when
tailoring the information that would be useful to investors and customers. Disclosure rules
that are too rigid may become incompatible with risk management processes that continually
evolve.
Disclosures should clearly identify all significant risk exposures--whether on or off the
balance sheet--and their impact on the firm's financial condition and performance, cash flow,
and earnings potential. With regard to securitizations, derivatives, and other innovative
risk-transfer instruments, traditional accounting disclosures of a company's balance sheet at
a single point in time may not be sufficient to convey the full impact of a company's
financial prospects.
For example, if a firm securitizes receivables through commercial paper conduits, those
receivables are no longer on the company's books under current accounting standards. Yet
the aging of receivables is a key indicator that investors and lenders use to assess the quality
of sales and operations. If the receivables move off the balance sheet, information about the
aging of the receivables should continue to be part of the firm's disclosures.

Equally important are disclosures about how risks are being managed and the underlying
basis for values and other estimates that are included in financial reports. These disclosures
should identify key risk drivers and describe the range of possible outcomes. Unlike typical
accounting reports, information generated by risk management tends to be oriented less to a
point in time and more to a description of the risks and the variability of results.
To take an example from the world of banking where the discipline of risk management is
relatively well developed, an accounting report might say that the fair value of an investment
portfolio is $300 million and has dropped $10 million from the last report. However, the
bank's internal risk report would show much more extensive information, such as the interest
rate, maturity, and credit quality of the assets and the range of values the portfolio would
take under alternative future scenarios. The user of a risk-management report could
determine whether changes in value were due to declining credit quality, rising interest rates,
portfolio sales, or payoffs of underlying loans.
Corporate risk officers have developed other types of reports that provide information on
the extent to which the total return in a particular line of business compensates for the line's
comprehensive risk. On an enterprise basis, a reader of covariance reports can determine
whether the growing lines of business have risk exposures that tend to offset those in other
business lines--thereby resulting in lower volatility for the earnings of the corporation as a
whole. If the lines of business have high correlations, investors would expect management
and the boards of directors to have in place more significant processes to monitor and
mitigate those risks.
Complex organizations should continue to improve their risk-management and reporting
functions. When they are comfortable with the reliability and consistency of the information
in these reports, they should begin disclosing this information to the market, perhaps in
summary form, paying due attention to the need for keeping proprietary business data
confidential. Not only would such disclosure provide more qualitative and quantitative
information about the firm's current risk exposure to the market, it would also help the
market assess the quality of the risk oversight and risk appetite of the organization.
A sound risk-management system in a complex organization should continually monitor all
relevant risks, including credit, market, liquidity, operational, and reputation risks.
Reputation risk, which recent events have shown can make or break a company, becomes
especially hard to manage when off-balance-sheet activities conducted in a separate legal
entity can affect the parent firm's reputation. For all these risks, disclosures consistent with
the information used internally by risk managers could be very beneficial to market
participants.
Conclusion
In conclusion, an effective enterprise-wide risk management process can provide executive
management and the board of directors with a framework to strengthen the governance
process. Risk management can identify where exposures exceed the risk- tolerance limits
and determine where investments in enhanced controls can most effectively mitigate
remaining risks. The evolution of risk management can provide metrics for management and
the board of directors to assess the relative returns from various forms of risk exposures and
can help shape strategic decisions. For companies undergoing rapid growth and those
engaged in relatively new business processes and practices, risk management can provide a
method for developing an internal control infrastructure to support the success of the
business strategy.

Further, the risk management framework can improve the transparency of disclosures to
help investors and customers better understand the operations of the firm. I particularly want
to emphasize that disclosure need not be in a standard accounting framework or exactly the
same for all organizations. Rather, each entity should disclose the information its
stakeholders need to best evaluate the entity's risk profile. Companies should be less
concerned about the vehicle of disclosure and more concerned about the substance of the
information made available to the public.
No business can afford to remain static, and firms of all sizes should continually pursue
better ways to manage risk. The discipline of risk management is still relatively young.
Investments in better forms of risk management processes often reduce losses and provide a
more robust framework for evaluating business alternatives. Following sound risk
management, governance, and disclosure practices consistently is also crucial to maintaining
the confidence of capital and financial markets. Boards of directors and executive
management are responsible for ensuring that the corporate governance process is
conducted with competence and integrity. If they do, our economic system should grow
stronger.

Footnotes
1. After Enron: A Survey for Corporate Directors, Institute of Internal Auditors and National
Association of Corporate Directors, 2002. Return to text
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Last update: October 8, 2002 10:00 AM