“…Traditional concepts to describe the tail of a loss distribution are value‐at‐risk (VaR) and expected shortfall (ES); see, for example, McNeil and Frey (), Cotter and Dowd (), or Chavez‐Demoulin, Embrechts, and Sardy (). On the other hand, point process methods allow the dynamic behavior of (extreme) events to be captured and are typically applied in the context of portfolio credit risk, market microstructure analysis, contagion analysis, or jump‐diffusion models; see, for example, Engle and Russell (), Bauwens and Hautsch (), Errais, Giesecke, and Goldberg (), Bacry and Muzy (), or Aït‐Sahalia, Cacho‐Diaz, and Laeven (). Moreover, point process theory provides an elegant formulation for the characterization of the limiting distribution of extreme value distributions, see Pickands () or Smith (), and therefore builds a natural complementary framework to extreme value analysis.…”