Friday, February 27, 2009

Time to Call a Certified Risk Manager?

Today's degenerating business circumstances have forced companies to examine their risk management programs to identify the significant risks that were minimized or overlooked. The financial free fall brought attention to six primary risks: short-term investments, financial firms, business associates, insurance providers, emerging risks, and costs. Short-term investments were revealed to carry high liquidity risks. Financial institutions neglected to limit their exposures only to their capital, entered into agreements that placed credit lines in peril, and enacted policies that placed a concentrated portion of financial risk onto individual institutions. The collapse of Bear Stearns demonstrated why businesses must pay more attention to their business-partner-related exposures and monitor the financial health of affiliated institutions. The near-collapse of American International Group pushed companies to consider alternative means of limiting exposures, such as self-insurance and captives. Sixteen months ago, businesses paid less attention to emerging risks related to changing business conditions, overall economic conditions, and governmental policies. Finally, businesses failed to garner a return-on-investment in risk management spending by drafting policies that were reactive instead of proactive in nature.

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