NAME OF THE COURSE |
OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT |
NAME OF THE CERTIFICATION |
CERTIFIED TREASURY RISK MANAGEMENT PROFESSIONAL – CTRMP |
Course Overview |
Changes in markets, techniques, technologies, and products have altered the landscape of Operations and fueled the explosive development of Operational Risk management. The regulators of financial and public companies are demanding a far greater level of disclosure and awareness by directors about the risks they manage and the effectiveness of the controls they have in place to reduce or mitigate these risks. There is also a greater realization that a major source of earnings volatility can be attributed to the way a firm operates and not “financial risk”. All these changes have triggered the need for an efficient Operational Risk Management system in organizations. |
Training Duration |
30 Hours
Training Session: 1 Week
Session Days : 5 Working Days |
Training Schedules |
Weekdays (Sunday to Thursday)
Regular Sessions : 6 Hrs Per day (9am to 2pm or 3.00pm to 9.00 pm)
Food & refreshments provided
WeekEnds (Friday & Saturday)
Fast Track Sessions: 8 Hours per day (9am to 5pm)
Food & refreshments provided |
Certifications: |
1) Certified Financial Risk Management Professional from Laurels Training Institute, Attested by Knowledge & Human Development Authority (KHDA) government of Dubai, UAE – With Online Worldwide recognition facility
2) Certificate from American Institute of Professional Studies (AIPS) in Financial Risk Management from USA (After 15 Days of course Completion which will couriered to the attendees office address) – With Online Worldwide recognition facility |
Tests |
Yes |
Learning Aids |
Yes |
Course Material |
Hard & Soft Copies of Study Material |
Language of Instruction |
English |
Instructor Helpline |
Yes
1. Email
2. Social Media (For Emergency requirements) |
Registration Requirements |
1. Passport Copy
2. Curriculum Vitae
3. Passport size photographs
4. Course Fee |
Mode of Payment: |
Cash / Cheque / Credit Card / Bank Transfer. |
Eligibility Criteria
(Who should attend this training) |
– Risk Managers
– Internal Auditors
– Accountants
– Backoffice Employees
– Controllers
– Managers
– Compliance
– Regulators
– Account Managers |
Course Benefits |
1. Position to fully understand the need for the creation of operational risk frameworks and their impact on the strategy and processes
2.To develop the understanding of operational risk management necessary to manage, comment and understand an institution’s own risk management plans and reports
3.To provide a practical and realistic approach to the implementing of an effective, best-practice operational risk management programme and the creation of the necessary risk culture |
Course Contents / Outline |
Introduction to Operational Risk
Objectives
Defining operational risk
Significance of operational risk
Operational risk management programs
Addressing operational risk
Measuring and modeling operational risk
Basic Concepts
Objectives
Loss events
Risk Factors, loss types and event/ factor controllability
Dependencies between Risk Factors and Events
Attribution of Loss
Regulatory Treatment of Operational Risk under Basel-II
Objectives
Introduction, Definitions and data issues
Measurement Methodologies
Role of Pillars 2 and 3
Sound Practices
Operational Risk in Various Banking Sectors
Objectives
Introduction and Spectrum of Risks
Accounting policies, costing and pricing models
Private banking sector
Operational Risk in insurance
Objectives
Introduction
Risks exclusive to insurance and Regulatory Issues
Alternative Risk Transfer and Finite Risk Captives
Captives
Developing objectives and identifying risks
Objectives
Risk Management Agenda
Risk Management Targets
Risk Management Organization and Policies
Benchmarking Internal Processes and Resources
Identifying Process and Resource Risks
Identifying Risk Factors
Identifying and Categorizing Loss Events
Estimating potential losses – Data
Objectives
Challenges to Operational Risk analysis
General measurement techniques
Historical analysis
Subjective risk assessment
Estimating potential losses – Loss distributions
Objectives
Overview of probability distributions
Building a distribution
Probability distributions
Estimating risk factors
Choosing an event distribution
Operational Risk database
Analyzing risks
Objectives
Aggregating risks
Monte Carlo loss simulation
Risk management alternatives
Analyzing loss events
Analyzing risky processes and resources
Analyzing risk factors
Loss prediction and prevention
Objectives
Loss prediction
Loss prevention
Process reengineering and work restructuring
Product redesign and automation
Human factors engineering
ERP and reliability maintenance
Loss control
Objectives
Introduction
Diagnostic controls and Inventory management
Redundant systems and boundary systems
Computer security and physical security management
Internal and external audit
Loss reduction and risk avoidance
Objectives
Legal risk reduction and loss isolation
Contingency Planning
Crisis Management
Risk avoidance
Quality management
Human resources management
Organizational design, Culture and relationship management
Risk financing
Objectives
Introduction
Financial restructuring
Asset-Liability Management
Corporate diversification
Insurance
Self-Insurance
Hedging using derivatives
Contractual risk transfer
Measurement framework
Objectives
ORM cycle
Framework criteria and assumptions
Current framework approaches
Measurement process for ORM
Delta and EVT methodologies
ORM in practice
Objectives
Learning and response loops
Guidelines for effective reporting
Event reports and Operational profiles
Risk reports
Evaluating and updating the risk model
Implementing bank-wide ORM
Enterprise-wide Risk Management (ERM)
Objectives
Role of technology
Enterprise-wide risk information systems
Challenges to ERM
Project Management for an ERM system
Basic and causal models
Objectives
Operational Risk Management (ORM) model
Top-down risk models
Bottom-up risk models
Selecting a risk model
Causal models
Legal risk and taxation rules
Objectives
Introduction
Contract enforcement
Board of directors and shareholder activism
Management responsibility for legal risk
Transparency and collateral
Shifting ground in international taxation
E-banking
Objectives
Introduction
Operational risks associated with Electronic Banking
Security risk
Systems design, implementation, and maintenance flaws
Customer misuse of products and services |