Portfolio Inputs
Scenario Quick Reference
| Scenario | Equity | Rates | Spreads |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mild Recession | -15% | -50bp | +100bp |
| Severe Recession | -40% | -100bp | +300bp |
| 2008 GFC Replay | -50% | -150bp | +500bp |
| Stylized Stagflation | -25% | +200bp | +150bp |
Stress Test Results
Loss Decomposition
| Component | Impact | Calculation |
|---|---|---|
| Equity Loss | -$20,000M | $50,000M x -40% |
| Rate Effect | +$4,000M | $80,000M x 5.0 x -1% |
| Credit Loss | -$3,600M | $30,000M x 4.0 x 3% |
| Total Loss | -$19,600M |
Portfolio Waterfall
Result Interpretation
| Result | Coverage Ratio | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| PASS | ≥ 150% | Strong capital adequacy |
| WARNING | 100% - 150% | Adequate but thin capital |
| FAIL | < 100% | Insufficient capital |
Under the Severe Recession scenario, your portfolio would lose $19,600M (12.25%). Your capital cushion of $15,000M covers 76.53% of the projected loss. A Loss Coverage Ratio below 100% indicates insufficient capital to absorb stress losses.
Understanding Portfolio Stress Testing
What is Stress Testing?
Stress testing evaluates how a portfolio would perform under adverse market conditions. Unlike Value at Risk (VaR), which estimates losses at a confidence level under normal conditions, stress tests examine specific extreme scenarios that may not be captured by statistical models.
Rate Effect: -Value x Duration x Rate Change
Credit Loss: -Value x Spread Duration x Spread Change
Loss Coverage = Capital / |Total Loss|
Key Metrics Explained
- Equity Shock: The percentage decline in equity values. The 2008 GFC saw S&P 500 decline ~57% peak-to-trough.
- Rate Shock: Change in interest rates (bps). Negative values mean rates fall, which increases bond prices.
- Spread Shock: Widening of credit spreads (bps). Investment-grade spreads peaked at ~600bps during 2008.
- Loss Coverage Ratio: Capital / Total Loss. Values of 150% or higher indicate strong capital adequacy.
Stress Testing vs. VaR
VaR estimates maximum loss at a confidence level (e.g., 99%) under normal market conditions, using historical data or simulations. Stress testing examines losses under specific extreme scenarios that may fall outside normal distributions. VaR answers "What's my worst expected loss on a normal day?" while stress tests ask "What happens if 2008 repeats?" Both are complementary.
Key Assumptions
- Linear stress factors applied instantaneously
- No rebalancing during stress event
- Historical correlations assumed to hold
- Duration approximation (first-order sensitivity)
- Uniform credit spread shock across tiers
- Credit losses from spread widening only (no defaults)
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and should not be used as the sole basis for investment or risk management decisions. The stress scenarios are simplified approximations. Actual market stress events may differ significantly from modeled scenarios. Always consult with qualified financial professionals and conduct comprehensive risk analysis before making investment decisions.