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Explain the Concept of “Wrong-Way Risk” in Derivatives Trading.

Wrong-Way Risk (WWR) occurs when the counterparty's credit exposure to a client is negatively correlated with the client's credit quality. For example, if a client's derivative position performs well when the client's financial health is deteriorating, the exposure increases precisely when the likelihood of default is highest.

This correlation makes the credit risk much more dangerous.

How Does an Exchange’s Matching Engine Affect the Execution Quality of a Complex Spread?
What Is ‘PFE’ (Potential Future Exposure) and How Is It Used in Credit Risk Management?
How Does an Asset’s “Quality” Influence Its Bid-Offer Spread?
How Does the Client Agreement Typically Address the Right of Rehypothecation?