Valuation risk
Valuation risk is the risk that an entity suffers a loss when trading an asset or a liability due to a difference between the accounting value and the price effectively obtained in the trade.
In other words, valuation risk is the uncertainty about the difference between the value reported in the balance sheet for an asset or a liability and the price that the entity could obtain if it effectively sold the asset or transferred the liability.
This risk is especially significant for financial assets and related marketable contracts with complex features and limited liquidity, that are valued using internally developed pricing models. Valuation errors can result for instance from missing consideration of risk factors, inaccurate modeling of risk factors, or inaccurate modeling of the sensitivity of instrument prices to risk factors. Errors are more likely when models use inputs that are unobservable or for which little information is available, and when financial instruments are illiquid so that the accuracy of pricing models cannot be verified with regular market trades.
Measurement of financial instrument fair value according to accounting rules
According to the International Financial Reporting Standards, or IFRS, entities must classify their financial instruments in different categories, depending on their business model and their intention to trade such instruments or keep them in their balance sheet. The classification of financial instruments determines the methodology for their valuation. The admitted categories are:- Held to Collect, measured at fair value on first-time recognition and at amortized cost afterwards
- Fair Value Through Other Comprehensive Income, measured at fair value with changes in fair value recorded in an equity reserve
- Fair Value Through Profit & Loss, measured at fair value with changes in fair value recorded in the profit and loss statement
Inputs can be observable or unobservable, according to the following IFRS 13 definitions:
- Observable: "Inputs that are developed using market data, such as publicly available information about actual events or transactions, and that reflect the assumptions that market participants would use when pricing the asset or liability"
- Unobservable: "Inputs for which market data are not available and that are developed using the best information available about the assumptions that market participants would use when pricing the asset or liability"
- Market prices, i.e. prices from actual trades. Prices from trades executed in active markets are observable inputs and should be used by preference. When market prices are not available, an entity can use prices for comparable instruments.
- Pricing models, which entities use when market prices are not available. For certain instruments the pricing models are common practice and use inputs that can be easily drawn from traded instrument prices; in such cases, pricing models can be considered observable.
- Parameters, which are inputs to the pricing models, including market parameters and parameters calculated within the model. Market and model parameters can be considered observable when they can be directly or indirectly drawn from market prices quoted on active markets by means of widely accepted methodologies.
- Level 1 inputs: quoted prices in active markets for identical assets or liabilities that the entity can access at the measurement date.
- Level 2 inputs: inputs, other than quoted prices included within Level 1, that are observable for the asset or liability, either directly or indirectly.
- Level 3 inputs: unobservable inputs for the asset or liability.
The exposure of financial instruments to valuation risk is lowest for Level 1 instruments and increases as a direct function of the significance of unobservable inputs used in the valuation, reaching a maximum with Level 3 instruments.
Taxonomy of valuation risk
Valuation risk is a financial risk. However, it is different in nature from other financial risks, like market risk. The latter is measured as the potential loss deriving from the evolution of the prices of an entity's financial instruments over time and is calculated as the potential difference in the instrument price at the valuation date and after a certain number of days in the future. This implies two key conceptual and methodological differences vs. valuation risk:- Valuation risk is the uncertainty about the difference between the fair value reported for a financial instrument at the valuation date and the price that could be obtained on that same date if the instrument were effectively traded. It is therefore an instantaneous risk that is measured at a specific point in time; its measurement does not involve any time interval.
- Market risk and other financial risks are measured by simulating adverse movements of the risk factors affecting the value of an entity's financial instruments during the holding period, implicitly assuming that the pricing models used by the entity correctly reflect the instrument value and that capacity is maintained along all the holding period. On the opposite, valuation risk represents the uncertainty over the capacity of the pricing models to correctly represent the instrument prices.
The example of banks
See valuation control.
In February 2020 the European Systemic Risk Board warned in a report that banks' substantial amounts of financial instruments with complex features and limited liquidity are a source of risk for the stability of the global financial system.
A 2017 report by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, an international regulator for the banking sector, noted that IFRS 13 leaves entities significant discretion in determining financial instrument fair value and identified this discretion as a potential source of moral hazard: "The evidence consistent with accounting discretion as contributing to moral hazard behavior indicates that prudential valuation requirements may be justified."
Areas where discretion may be applied in the determination of financial instrument fair value include:
- Definition of active market
- Choice of pricing models and methodologies
- Classification of inputs used in pricing models as observable or non-observable
- Estimation of the level of significance of unobservable inputs used in pricing models
The ECB in a Supervision Newsletter of 2021 identified valuation risk as a priority and noted that its inspections had "highlighted severe weaknesses in banks' internal valuation risk frameworks." The ECB acknowledged "The interconnectedness of the accounting and prudential frameworks" and consistently adopted in its inspections on banks a comprehensive perspective covering both the accounting space and the prudential space.
Issues in estimating banks' valuation risk exposures
A 2017 paper of the Bank of Italy noted significant challenges in the assessment of banks' exposure to valuation risk as a result of insufficient published data. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision also highlighted this lack of transparency in the above-mentioned 2017 report: "Accounting values may embed a significant degree of uncertainty and, as a result, may impede the market's ability to assess a bank's risk profile and overall capital adequacy."Subsequent research confirmed that more informative analysis of banks' valuation risk exposures, fair value measurement methodologies and practices, risk management processes, and prudential capital allocation would only be made possible by a significant overhaul in banks' disclosures.
Critical lack of disclosed data has been identified in the following areas:
- Qualitative information about the governance and controls on valuation risk
- Segmentation of Level 2 instruments by significance of the unobservable inputs used for their valuation
- Details on unobservable inputs, their use in the valuation models, their significance for pricing, and the sensitivity of financial instrument valuations to changes in unobservable inputs
- Contribution of liabilities to valuation risk, i.e. whether liabilities mitigate a bank's valuation risk exposure or instead contribute to it