by Rick Nason, PhD, CFA
Partner, RSD Solutions Inc.
The past three years have been the perfect storm for financial institutions in terms of their risk management. Chaos (folly) seemed to be the operating mode during the height of the financial crisis.
What about corporate financial risk though? It seems to have been lost in the shuffle of the daily business news and perhaps understandably so. Relatively speaking, exchange rates have been calm – although the recent saber rattling about currency wars might be shifting. Interest rates for most of the world were at record lows before the crisis and, since, central banks have been playing a game of limbo dancing to see how low they can drive their domestic rates. It seems that only commodity prices and perhaps demand have been relatively volatile.
Has the recent past then been a case of the perfect calm for corporate financial risk? Will the lessons learned from the financial institutional mess translate to the corporate world? (Were there lessons learned from the experiences of the financial institutions?) One thing for sure is that the road to recovery (hopefully there will be a road to recovery) is likely to be interesting risk wise.
Today’s blog is a re-posting of RSD’s blog on Friday, November 26, 2010. We thought it was fitting as the FEI members soon gather in Ottawa.
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