Risk Management: by Karan Pratap Singh Research Scholar Dept. of Mgmt. Birla Institute of Technology
Risk Management: by Karan Pratap Singh Research Scholar Dept. of Mgmt. Birla Institute of Technology
By
• Risk Pooling
Rather than face the risk of totaling our car and being required to
replace it out of current income, we enter a pool, joining others for a
known affordable fee, thus sharing the risk with other pool members.
This concept of transferring the individual's risk to the pool is as old as
mankind first banding into tribes.
• Law of Large Numbers
If the pool is small, there is the risk of Adverse Selection meaning that
there are too few members in the pool to make accurate predictions
of the frequency of an occurrence.
For example, if I take one die from a pair of dice and roll it 10 times, I
might well have 4 fives turn up out of the 10 rolls. However, if it is
rolled 100 times, 1000 times, 10,000 times, or 200,000 times, the
sides will come up equally to 3 or 4 decimal points. Thus, it becomes
predictable. When the frequency of the occurrence is accurately
established, losses can be predicted and the amount needed
(premium) from each member of the pool will be known.
Insurance companies have the right to deny insurance, or issue you a non-standard
policy if they decide that your situation poses a risk too high for their definition of
standard risk.
The law that requires an insurance company to reveal the source of any third-party
information that caused it to deny or issue a nonstandard policy is known as The
Fair Credit Reporting Act.
(i) Personal risks- Personal risks detrimentally affect the income earning power of an
individual.
(i) Risk of premature death.
(ii) Risk of old age.
(iii) Risk of sickness.
(iv) Risk of unemployment
(ii) Property risks-Property owners face the risk of having their property stolen,
damaged or destroyed by various causes. A property may suffer direct loss, indirect loss, losses
arising from extra expenses of maintaining the property or losses brought about by natural
disasters
(iii) Liability risks- The law imposes on us a duty of care to our neighbour and to ensure
that we do not inflict bodily injury on them. For example, if you injure your neighbour or damage
his property, the law would impose fines on you and you may have to pay heavy damages .
Speculative risk is a category of risk that can be taken on voluntarily and will either result in a profit or
loss.
All speculative risks are undertaken as a result of a conscious choice. Almost all financial investment
activities are examples of speculative risk, because such ventures ultimately result in an unknown amount of
success or failure. Speculative risk is a category of risk that, when undertaken, results in an uncertain degree
of gain or loss. All speculative risks are made as conscious choices and are not just a result of uncontrollable
circumstances. Speculative risk is the opposite of pure risk.
Almost all investment activities involve speculative risks, as an investor has no idea whether an investment
will be a blazing success or an utter failure.
Risk Management
•Management of Risk (M_o_R) is a route map for risk management. It can help
organizations identify, assess and control risks and put in place effective
frameworks for making informed decisions.