FRM Part I Formulas
FRM Part I Formulas
The Financial Risk Manager (FRM) Part I exam covers a wide array of formulas across several
key areas in risk management. Here's a list of the most essential formulas you'll need to
know:
Covariance:
Cov(R1 , R2 ) = E[(R1 − μ1 )(R2 − μ2 )]
Correlation:
Cov(R1 ,R2 )
ρR1 ,R2 =
σ1 σ2
3. Risk-Return Measures
Sharpe Ratio:
E(RP )−Rf
Sharpe Ratio =
σP
Jensen's Alpha:
α = RP − [Rf + β(Rm − Rf )]
1/3
Treynor Ratio:
E(RP )−Rf
Treynor Ratio =
βP
Information Ratio:
E(RP )−Rb
Information Ratio = σϵ
Var(Rm )
Historical VaR:
Use the historical data to directly find the lowest percentile value for the given
confidence level.
5. Fixed Income
Duration (Macaulay):
∑nt=1 t×Ct /(1+r)t
D=
P
Modified Duration:
D∗ = D
(1+r)
Convexity:
∑nt=1 t(t+1)×Ct /(1+r)t+2
C=
P
Bond Price:
n Ct
P = ∑t=1
(1+r)t
Beta:
Cov(Ri ,Rm )
β=
Var(Rm )
2/3
7. Portfolio Theory
Expected Return of a Portfolio:
E(RP ) = w1 E (R1 ) + w2 E (R2 )
8. Option Pricing
Black-Scholes Model:
C = S0 N (d1 ) − Xe−rT N (d2 ) where
2
d1 = ln(S0 /X)+(r+σ
σ T
/2)T
d2 = d1 − σ T
9. Credit Risk
Credit Spread:
Credit Spread = Yield of Risky Bond − Yield of Risk-Free Bond
Expected Default Frequency (EDF):
This is a complex calculation involving default probabilities, credit spreads, and other
factors.
These formulas cover a lot of what you'll encounter on the FRM Part I exam. You'll also need
to understand how they relate to risk management practices and how to apply them in
different contexts. Be sure to practice using these formulas with real-world data to get
comfortable before your exam!
3/3