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FRM Part I Formulas

The document provides a comprehensive list of essential formulas for the Financial Risk Manager (FRM) Part I exam, covering key areas such as Time Value of Money, Probability and Statistics, Risk-Return Measures, Value at Risk, Fixed Income, Capital Asset Pricing Model, Portfolio Theory, Option Pricing, Credit Risk, and Interest Rate Models. Each section includes specific formulas and their calculations, which are crucial for understanding risk management practices. It emphasizes the importance of applying these formulas with real-world data in preparation for the exam.

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Vivek Ayyagari
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views

FRM Part I Formulas

The document provides a comprehensive list of essential formulas for the Financial Risk Manager (FRM) Part I exam, covering key areas such as Time Value of Money, Probability and Statistics, Risk-Return Measures, Value at Risk, Fixed Income, Capital Asset Pricing Model, Portfolio Theory, Option Pricing, Credit Risk, and Interest Rate Models. Each section includes specific formulas and their calculations, which are crucial for understanding risk management practices. It emphasizes the importance of applying these formulas with real-world data in preparation for the exam.

Uploaded by

Vivek Ayyagari
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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FRM Part I Formulas

all formula in FRM part I

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:

1. Time Value of Money (TVM)


Present Value (PV):
FV
PV = (1+r)n

Future Value (FV):


F V = P V × (1 + r)n
Interest Rate (r):
1
r = ( FP VV ) n − 1

Number of Periods (n):


ln(F V /P V )
n= ln(1+r)

2. Probability and Statistics


Variance of a Portfolio:
Var(RP ) = w12 Var(R1 ) + w22 Var(R2 ) + 2w1 w2 Cov(R1 , R2 )
​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ ​

Standard Deviation (Volatility):


σP =​
Var(RP ) ​ ​

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


Beta (Systematic Risk):


Cov(RP ,Rm )
β=
​ ​

Var(Rm )

4. Value at Risk (VaR)


Parametric VaR:
VaR = μ − Zα × σ where Zα is the Z-score corresponding to the confidence level
​ ​

(e.g., 1.96 for 95%).

Historical VaR:
Use the historical data to directly find the lowest percentile value for the given
confidence level.

Monte Carlo VaR:


Simulate random outcomes based on the asset's risk factors and calculate the percentile
of the distribution.

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

6. Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)


Expected Return:
E(Ri ) = Rf + βi × (E(Rm ) − Rf )
​ ​ ​ ​ ​

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 )
​ ​ ​ ​ ​

Portfolio Variance (for two assets):


Var(RP ) = w12 Var(R1 ) + w22 Var(R2 ) + 2w1 w2 Cov(R1 , 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
​ ​ ​

Put Option (Black-Scholes):


P = Xe−rT N (−d2 ) − S0 N (−d1 ) ​ ​ ​

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.

10. Interest Rate Models


Simple Interest:
I =P ×r×t
Compound Interest:
A = P × (1 + r/n)nt where A is the future value, P is the principal, r is the annual
rate, and n is the number of compounding periods.

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!

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