Risk Management meets Open Source
PillarOne focuses on risk management: contracts, portfolios and organisations. Driven by the new requirements of Solvency II, PillarOne addresses all facets of risks - it provides a sound foundation in enterprise risk management.
The PillarOne community discusses, compares and benchmarks risk management methods, and collaboratively develops new, improved approaches. All results are freely available - including the state-of-the-art software implementation, jointly led by industry specialists and professional enterprise application developers.
Events
Read up on PillarOne events and on further risk management topics.
- PillarOne at ASTIN group in Munich 17.11.2008 09:00 to 17.11.2008 17:00 - Munich
- Markus Stricker and Jörg Dittrich speak at German ASTIN group meeting in autumn.
News
Have a look at the workbench, get informed about releases.
- First feedback from Asian markets 08.07.2008
- Japanese and South Corean market interest in risk based capital concepts is high.
- PillarOne.RiskAnalytics as next step 05.06.2008
- The PillarOne project group started to design the planned risk analytics suite.
- Reserving Application v0.3 released 03.06.2008
Blog
Stay updated on PillarOne issues and post your comments.
- Is it fine drinking with your enemies wine? 26.08.2008
- When people hear about PillarOne being Open Source and thus based on collaboration between different members of a community, the first questions that comes into their mind may be:
- Swiss Solvency Test - Reserving risk 09.07.2008
- The Wüthrich/Merz/Lysenko method implemented in the PillarOne reserving software gives a measure for the expected runoff result. Could this possibly be used as a proxy for the Swiss Solvency Test?
- Design Phase of PillarOne.RiskAnalytics 05.06.2008
- The PillarOne project group started to design the risk analytics parts. Within the Risk Management process the steps Model Design, Model Calibration, and Model Evaluation will be covered.
- Standing on the shoulders of giants 08.05.2008
- PillarOne's application infrastructure is built on top of de facto standard, leading components.

