Introduction

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Welcome to the official documentation for AnalytX!

This documentation serves as your comprehensive guide to understanding and implementing the powerful features and functionalities of AnalytX.

Whether you’re a developer exploring its capabilities or an enthusiast eager to delve into the world of AnalytX, this resource will provide you with insights, tutorials, and best practices to leverage the full potential of AnalytX.

AnalytX is a tool for advanced accounting, risk management analysis, simulations, asset-liability management, internal bank management, and business planning.

AnalytX is the next generation analytic solution for financial institution. It is based on ACTUS the forthcoming open source financial standard. AnalytX provides all necessary reports in the area of risk, finance and the basis for the new regulation.

  • Finance

    • AnalytX covers all accounting regimes such as IFRS and the different local GAAP’s. Multiple balance sheets and their associated P&L’s can be produced in parallel at any time. With its dynamic simulation capabilities it is the best budgeting tool conceivable. Combined with alternative market forecasts it becomes the ideal strategic planning tool. On the profitability side it supports Funds Transfer Pricing on the single contract level allowing customer, product, profit center profitability and any other grouping. It supports state of the art risk adjusted profitability.

  • Risk

    • In the area of Risk, AnalytX integrates in a true fashion market, credit and operational risk. It covers all known analytic techniques such as liquidity and interest rate gap, sensitivity analysis such as Duration/Convexity, stress testing (what-if) and Monte Carlo techniques. It supports all known reports related to these techniques including for example credit exposure analysis, expected loss and Value at Risk.

  • Regulation

    • AnalytX is future ready by having anticipated the trends of regulation. These trends are moving away

      1. from balance sheet based to single contract based reports and

      2. from essentially backwards looking balance sheet numbers (notional, market value) to forward looking cash-flow based analytics.