Risk management and control of risks in investment of financial assets

Investment activities are exposed to risks, which risk management seeks to identify, measure and limit. In managing these risks, the Bank of Finland uses widely employed risk management methods, market and credit risk models as well as sensitivity analyses.

Risk management of investment activities by the Bank of Finland has been entrusted jointly to the Administration department’s Risk Control and Financial Accounting division and the Market Operations department. Risk control of investment activities and reporting on risks and returns are the responsibility of the Administration department’s Risk Control and Financial Accounting division.

Risks to investment activities are reported daily to the persons involved in operational investment activities and monthly to the Bank of Finland Board. Developments in investment returns are reported monthly to the persons involved in investment activities and the Board member responsible for investment activities. Returns are considered every quarter in the Markets Committee, chaired by the Board member responsible for investment activities. The Board discusses risks and returns twice a year. Cases of non-compliance with the limits imposed are reported immediately. A report on total financial risks is submitted to the Board at quarterly intervals.

Decision-making framework for investment of financial assets and risk management, and various risk committees

Decisions on investment of financial assets and related risk management are taken by the Bank of Finland Board, the Markets Committee and, in the case of operational matters, also by the Investment Group and the Risk Group.

The Board is responsible for decisions on the objectives of investment activities, investment policy as well as risk management and responsible investment principles. Such decisions relate, among other things, to the size of the Bank’s own financial assets and foreign reserves, currency distribution of foreign reserves, long-term investment activity, the strategic allocation of the fixed-income investment portfolio by investment category, the leeway permitted in fixed-income investment activities by investment category and the level of interest rate and credit risks. The Board also decides on maximum credit risk limits.

Within the limits imposed by the Board, the Markets Committee makes detailed decisions on the investment of the Bank’s financial assets and risk management. Such decisions include the criteria for counterparties and issuers and more specific credit risk limits. The chair of the Markets Committee, who is also responsible for decision-making on the Committee, is the Board member responsible for the Bank of Finland’s own investments.

The emphasis of work in the Investment Group and the Risk Group is on the preparation of matters to be considered by decision-making bodies. In addition, the Investment Group acts as an internal decision-maker within the Market Operations department and as coordinator of matters common to the investment and risk control functions. Decisions on new counterparties to investments are taken mainly by the Investment Group or in exceptional cases by the Markets Committee. The Head of Market Operations chairs the Investment Group and makes decisions therein. The Head of the Administration department’s Risk Control and Financial Accounting division chairs the Risk Group and makes decisions therein.

The Bank of Finland has a Financial Risks Committee which, independently of the management of financial assets is tasked with supporting the Board by supervising and assessing financial risks that may affect the Bank’s balance sheet. The committee is not a decision-making body but instead gives recommendations and submits matters to the Board for information or decision, as necessary. The Financial Risks Committee is chaired by the Board member responsible for risk control.

The Bank of Finland also has an Operational and Cyber Risks Committee. The task of the Committee is to evaluate the Bank’s level of operational and cyber risk management and to give instructions and make recommendations on development of risk management procedures. Similarly to the Financial Risks Committee, the Operational and Cyber Risks Committee is not a decision-making body but instead gives recommendations and submits matters to the Board for information or decision, as necessary. The Operational and Cyber Risks Committee is chaired by the Board member responsible for risk control.

Risk measures and breakdowns

Breakdown of debt instruments and deposits in the Bank of Finland's financial assets, by credit rating¹

Credit rating 31 Dec 2020
EUR m
31 Dec 2019
EUR m
AAA 1,342 1,952
AA+ 2,376 2,930
AA 212 453
AA– 111 94
A+ 1,296 1,410
A 191 204
A– 67 76
BBB+ 60 54
BBB
BBB– 5
Below BBB–
No credit rating 56
Total 5,716 7,173
1 Covered bonds have been classified according to their own credit rating and not the credit rating of the issuer. The Bank of Japan has been rated according to the credit rating of the government.
Totals may not add up due to rounding.

Breakdown of debt instruments and deposits in the Bank of Finland’s financial assets, by home country of issuer/counterparty (according to market value)

Country or region (EUR m) 31 Dec 2020 31 Dec 2019
Euro area 266 917
Netherlands 67 100
Finland 61 26
Austria 60 74
Germany 56 501
France 22 215
Rest of Europe 832 1,047
Sweden 320 466
United Kingdom 244 293
Norway 151 155
Denmark 102 111
Switzerland 16 22
America 3,102 3,701
United States 2,491 2,920
Canada 612 781
Asia and Oceania 1,153 1,322
Japan 1,087 1,184
Australia 52 130
South Korea 13 9
International institutions 362 186
Total 5,716 7,173
Totals and subtotals may not add up due to rounding.

Sensitivity of the Bank of Finland’s financial assets to market changes

EUR m 2020 2019
Change in the value of the Bank of Finland's financial assets after appreciation of the euro exchange rate by 15% relative to foreign reserve currencies and gold as at 31 Dec -1,134 -1,150
Change in the value of the Bank of Finland's financial assets after an interest rate rise of 1% as at 31 Dec -123 -148
Change in the value of the Bank of Finland's equity funds after a decrease in the value of equity funds by 25% -284 -270

Allocation of the Bank of Finland's fixed-income investment portfolios at the end of 2020

Fixed-income investment portfolios Allocation at year-end (%)
Government debt instruments and central bank deposits 56.1
Government-related debt instruments 25.7
Covered bonds 7.0
Corporate bonds 10.7
Cash holdings 0.6
Total 100.0

Definitions and concepts

  • Market risk means the risk that the net value of assets will decline due to changes in market prices. Market price changes refer to changes in, for example, interest rates, exchange rates, the price of gold or stock prices, which are referred to as interest rate risk, exchange rate risk, gold price risk or equity risk, respectively.
  • Credit risk means the risk of financial losses arising from changes in the creditworthiness of a counterparty to a financial transaction or a securities issuer or from default by a counterparty or issuer.
  • Liquidity risk means the risk that assets cannot be made available when the need arises or their conversion into cash causes additional costs.
  • Operational risk refers to risk of extra costs or losses resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, personnel, systems or external events.
  • Investment portfolio: this consists of foreign currency-denominated and euro-denominated fixed-income investment portfolios and long-term investments. Its objective is to safeguard the value of financial assets and the Bank of Finland’s ongoing ability to meet with its central bank commitments.
  • Foreign reserves consist of unhedged foreign-currency investments and claims. These include the foreign-currency fixed-income investment portfolio and net receivables from the IMF.
  • Cash refers to covered and uncovered short-term bank deposits.
  • Modified duration is a measure of interest rate risk, indicating how much the value of a fixed-income investment or investments change in response to a small change in interest rates. For example, if the modified duration is 2 and interest rates rise by 1%, the value of fixed-income investments falls by 2%.
  • VaR figure at a certain confidence level means a loss in excess of which a loss occurs with a probability corresponding to the confidence level in question, over a target horizon. For example, if VaR 99% on a one-day horizon is EUR 3 million, this means there is a 1% probability the current day’s result will be worse than a loss of EUR 3 million (and a 99% probability the result will be better).
  • Expected Shortfall (ES) at a certain confidence level indicates the size of the expected loss in the event that the loss exceeds the VaR-level loss for that confidence level. For example, with an ES of 99%, this is an average loss of 1% on risk realisation.