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Chapter 22

Credit Risk
資管所 陳竑廷
Agenda
22.1

Credit Ratings

22.2

Historical Data

22.3

Recovery Rate

22.4

Estimating Default Probabilities from bond price

22.5

Comparison of Default Probability estimates

22.6

Using equity price to estimate Default Probabilities
• Credit Risk
– Arise from the probability that borrowers and
counterparties in derivatives transactions may
default.
22.1

Credit Ratings

• S&P
– AAA , AA, A, BBB, BB, B, CCC, CC, C

• Moody
– Aaa, Aa, A, Baa, Ba, B, Caa, Ca, C
best

worst

• Investment grade
– Bonds with ratings of BBB (or Baa) and above
22.2

•
•

Historical Data

For a company that starts with a good credit rating default
probabilities tend to increase with time
For a company that starts with a poor credit rating default
probabilities tend to decrease with time
Default Intensity
• The unconditional default probability
– the probability of default for a certain time period as
seen at time zero
39.717 - 30.494 = 9.223%

• The default intensity (hazard rate)
– the probability of default for a certain time period
conditional on no earlier default
100 – 30.494 = 69.506%
0.09223 / 0.69506 = 13.27%
λ (t ) : the default intensities at time t
V (t ) : the cumulative probability of the company surviving to time t

λ (t )∆t : the probability of default between time t and t + ∆t
condtional on no earlier default

[V (t ) − V (t + ∆t )] ÷ V (t ) = λ (t )∆t
V (t + ∆t ) − V (t ) = −λ (t )V (t )∆t
V (t + ∆t ) − V (t ) − λ (t )V (t )∆t
=
∆t
∆t
dV (t )
= −λ (t )V (t )
dt
t

V (t ) = e ∫
0

− λ (τ ) dτ
• Q(t) : the probability of default by time t

Q(t ) = 1 − V (t )
t

= 1− e ∫
0

− λ (τ ) dτ
−λ (t ) t

= 1− e

(22.1)
22.3

Recovery Rate

• Defined as the price of the bond immediately after
default as a percent of its face value

• Moody found the following relationship fitting the
data:
Recovery rate = 59.1% – 8.356 x Default rate
– Significantly negatively correlated with default rates
•

Source :
– Corporate Default and Recovery Rates, 1920-2006
22.4

Estimating Default
Probabilities

• Assumption
– The only reason that a corporate bond sells for less
than a similar risk-free bond is the possibility of
default
• In practice the price of a corporate bond is affected
by its liquidity.
λ : the average default intentisy per year
s : the spread of the corporate bond yield
R : the expected recovery rate

s
λ=
1− R
R = 40 %
s = 200 bp
0.02
λ =
= 3.33%
1 − 0 .4

(22.1)
λ
1-λ

λ

1

(1 − λ ) *1 + λ *1
e

1

rf

R

1-λ
1

(1 − λ ) *1 + λ * R
rf
e
e

−rf

[(1 − λ ) *1 + λ * R ] = 1* e

(1 − λ ) + λ R = e

−s

λ ( R − 1) + 1 = 1 − s
s = λ (1 − R )

−(rf + s )

Taylor expansion
A more exact calculation
• Suppose that Face value = $100 , Coupon = 6%
per annum , Last for 5 years
– Corporate bond
• Yield : 7% per annum → $95.34

– Risk-free bond
• Yield : 5% per annum → $104.094

• The expected loss = 104.094 – 95.34 = $ 8.75
0

1

2

3

4

5

Q : the probability of default per year
288.48Q = 8.75
Q = 3.03%

e -0.05 *3.5
Comparison of default
probability estimates

22.5

• The default probabilities estimated from
historical data are much less than those derived
from bond prices
Historical default intensity
The probability of the bond surviving for T years is

Q(t ) = 1 − e

−λ (t )t

1
λ (t ) = − ln(1 − Q(t ))
t

(22.1)
1
λ (7) = − ln[1 − Q(7)]
7
1
= − ln[1 − 0.00759]
7
= 0.11%
Default intensity from bonds
• A-rated bonds , Merrill Lynch 1996/12 – 2007/10
–The average yield was 5.993%
–The average risk-free rate was 5.289%
–The recovery rate is 40%

s
λ=
(22.2)
1− R
0.05993 − 0.05298
=
1 − 0.4
= 1.16%
0.11*(1-0.4)=0.066
Real World vs. Risk Neutral
Default Probabilities
• Risk-neutral default probabilities
– implied from bond yields
– Value credit derivatives or estimate the impact of default risk on
the pricing of instruments

• Real-world default probabilities
– implied from historical data
– Calculate credit VaR and scenario analysis
Using equity prices to
estimate default probability
22.6

• Unfortunately , credit ratings are revised relatively
infrequently.
– The equity prices can provide more up-to-date information
Merton’s Model

If VT < D , ET = 0

( default )

If VT > D , ET = VT - D

ET = max(VT − D,0)
•

V0 And σ0 can’t be directly observable.

•

But if the company is publicly traded , we can observe E0.
Merton’s model gives the value firm’s equity at time T as

ET = max(VT − D,0)
So we regard ET as a function of VT
We write

dE
= µ1dt + σ E dw(t ) ⇒ dE = Eµ1dt + Eσ E dw(t )
E
dV
= µ2 dt + σV dw(t ) ⇒ dV = Vµ2 dt + VσV dw(t )
V
 E is a function of V
∴ By Ito' s Lemma
∂E
dE =
dV +
∂V

Other term without dW(t) , so ignore it

(*)
(**)
Replace dE , dV by (*) (**) respectively

∂E
Eµ1dt + Eσ E dw(t ) =
(Vµ 2 dt + Vσ V dw(t )) +
∂V
∂E
∂E
=
Vµ 2 dt +
Vσ V dw(t ) +
∂V
∂V
We compare the left hand side of the equation above with
that of the right hand side
∂E
Eµ1dt =
Vµ2 dt +
∂V
and
∂E
Eσ E dW (t ) =
VσV dW (t )
∂V
∂E
⇒ Eσ E =
VσV
(22.4)
∂V
Example
• Suppose that
E0 = 3 (million)
σE = 0.80

r = 0.05

D = 10

T=1

Solving

then get

V0 = 12.40
σ0 = 0.2123

N(-d2) = 12.7%
Solving

F (σ V , V0 ) : E0 = V0 N(d1 ) − De − rT N(d 2 )
G (σ V , V0 ) : σ E E0 = N(d1 )σ V V0
minimize F (σ V , V0 ) + G (σ V , V0 )
2

2
Excel Solver

F(x,y)
=A2*NORMSDIST((LN(A2/10)+(0.05+B2*B2/2))/B2)
-10*EXP(-0.05)*NORMSDIST((LN(A2/10)+(0.05+B2*B2/2))/B2-B2)
G(x,y)
=NORMSDIST((LN(A7/10)+(0.05+B7*B7/2))/B7)*A7*B7
[F(x,y)]2+[G(x,y)]2
=(D2)^2+(E2)^2
• Initial V0 = 12.40 , σ0 = 0.2123

• Initial V0 = 10 , σ0 = 0.1
N(-d 2 ) = 12.7%
The mark value of the debt
= V0 − E0
= 12.40 − 3
= 9.4
The present value of the promised payment
= 10e - 0 .05*1
= 9.51
The expected loss
= ( 9.51-9.4 )/ 9.51
= 1.2%
The recovery rate
= (12.7 − 1.2) / 12.7
= 91%
Thank you

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Credit risk (2)

  • 2. Agenda 22.1 Credit Ratings 22.2 Historical Data 22.3 Recovery Rate 22.4 Estimating Default Probabilities from bond price 22.5 Comparison of Default Probability estimates 22.6 Using equity price to estimate Default Probabilities
  • 3. • Credit Risk – Arise from the probability that borrowers and counterparties in derivatives transactions may default.
  • 4. 22.1 Credit Ratings • S&P – AAA , AA, A, BBB, BB, B, CCC, CC, C • Moody – Aaa, Aa, A, Baa, Ba, B, Caa, Ca, C best worst • Investment grade – Bonds with ratings of BBB (or Baa) and above
  • 5. 22.2 • • Historical Data For a company that starts with a good credit rating default probabilities tend to increase with time For a company that starts with a poor credit rating default probabilities tend to decrease with time
  • 6. Default Intensity • The unconditional default probability – the probability of default for a certain time period as seen at time zero 39.717 - 30.494 = 9.223% • The default intensity (hazard rate) – the probability of default for a certain time period conditional on no earlier default 100 – 30.494 = 69.506% 0.09223 / 0.69506 = 13.27%
  • 7. λ (t ) : the default intensities at time t V (t ) : the cumulative probability of the company surviving to time t λ (t )∆t : the probability of default between time t and t + ∆t condtional on no earlier default [V (t ) − V (t + ∆t )] ÷ V (t ) = λ (t )∆t V (t + ∆t ) − V (t ) = −λ (t )V (t )∆t V (t + ∆t ) − V (t ) − λ (t )V (t )∆t = ∆t ∆t dV (t ) = −λ (t )V (t ) dt t V (t ) = e ∫ 0 − λ (τ ) dτ
  • 8. • Q(t) : the probability of default by time t Q(t ) = 1 − V (t ) t = 1− e ∫ 0 − λ (τ ) dτ −λ (t ) t = 1− e (22.1)
  • 9. 22.3 Recovery Rate • Defined as the price of the bond immediately after default as a percent of its face value • Moody found the following relationship fitting the data: Recovery rate = 59.1% – 8.356 x Default rate – Significantly negatively correlated with default rates
  • 10. • Source : – Corporate Default and Recovery Rates, 1920-2006
  • 11. 22.4 Estimating Default Probabilities • Assumption – The only reason that a corporate bond sells for less than a similar risk-free bond is the possibility of default • In practice the price of a corporate bond is affected by its liquidity.
  • 12. λ : the average default intentisy per year s : the spread of the corporate bond yield R : the expected recovery rate s λ= 1− R R = 40 % s = 200 bp 0.02 λ = = 3.33% 1 − 0 .4 (22.1)
  • 13. λ 1-λ λ 1 (1 − λ ) *1 + λ *1 e 1 rf R 1-λ 1 (1 − λ ) *1 + λ * R rf e e −rf [(1 − λ ) *1 + λ * R ] = 1* e (1 − λ ) + λ R = e −s λ ( R − 1) + 1 = 1 − s s = λ (1 − R ) −(rf + s ) Taylor expansion
  • 14. A more exact calculation • Suppose that Face value = $100 , Coupon = 6% per annum , Last for 5 years – Corporate bond • Yield : 7% per annum → $95.34 – Risk-free bond • Yield : 5% per annum → $104.094 • The expected loss = 104.094 – 95.34 = $ 8.75
  • 15. 0 1 2 3 4 5 Q : the probability of default per year 288.48Q = 8.75 Q = 3.03% e -0.05 *3.5
  • 16. Comparison of default probability estimates 22.5 • The default probabilities estimated from historical data are much less than those derived from bond prices
  • 17. Historical default intensity The probability of the bond surviving for T years is Q(t ) = 1 − e −λ (t )t 1 λ (t ) = − ln(1 − Q(t )) t (22.1)
  • 18. 1 λ (7) = − ln[1 − Q(7)] 7 1 = − ln[1 − 0.00759] 7 = 0.11%
  • 19. Default intensity from bonds • A-rated bonds , Merrill Lynch 1996/12 – 2007/10 –The average yield was 5.993% –The average risk-free rate was 5.289% –The recovery rate is 40% s λ= (22.2) 1− R 0.05993 − 0.05298 = 1 − 0.4 = 1.16%
  • 21. Real World vs. Risk Neutral Default Probabilities • Risk-neutral default probabilities – implied from bond yields – Value credit derivatives or estimate the impact of default risk on the pricing of instruments • Real-world default probabilities – implied from historical data – Calculate credit VaR and scenario analysis
  • 22. Using equity prices to estimate default probability 22.6 • Unfortunately , credit ratings are revised relatively infrequently. – The equity prices can provide more up-to-date information
  • 23. Merton’s Model If VT < D , ET = 0 ( default ) If VT > D , ET = VT - D ET = max(VT − D,0)
  • 24. • V0 And σ0 can’t be directly observable. • But if the company is publicly traded , we can observe E0.
  • 25. Merton’s model gives the value firm’s equity at time T as ET = max(VT − D,0) So we regard ET as a function of VT We write dE = µ1dt + σ E dw(t ) ⇒ dE = Eµ1dt + Eσ E dw(t ) E dV = µ2 dt + σV dw(t ) ⇒ dV = Vµ2 dt + VσV dw(t ) V  E is a function of V ∴ By Ito' s Lemma ∂E dE = dV + ∂V Other term without dW(t) , so ignore it (*) (**)
  • 26. Replace dE , dV by (*) (**) respectively ∂E Eµ1dt + Eσ E dw(t ) = (Vµ 2 dt + Vσ V dw(t )) + ∂V ∂E ∂E = Vµ 2 dt + Vσ V dw(t ) + ∂V ∂V We compare the left hand side of the equation above with that of the right hand side ∂E Eµ1dt = Vµ2 dt + ∂V and ∂E Eσ E dW (t ) = VσV dW (t ) ∂V ∂E ⇒ Eσ E = VσV (22.4) ∂V
  • 27. Example • Suppose that E0 = 3 (million) σE = 0.80 r = 0.05 D = 10 T=1 Solving then get V0 = 12.40 σ0 = 0.2123 N(-d2) = 12.7%
  • 28. Solving F (σ V , V0 ) : E0 = V0 N(d1 ) − De − rT N(d 2 ) G (σ V , V0 ) : σ E E0 = N(d1 )σ V V0 minimize F (σ V , V0 ) + G (σ V , V0 ) 2 2
  • 30.
  • 31. • Initial V0 = 12.40 , σ0 = 0.2123 • Initial V0 = 10 , σ0 = 0.1
  • 32. N(-d 2 ) = 12.7% The mark value of the debt = V0 − E0 = 12.40 − 3 = 9.4 The present value of the promised payment = 10e - 0 .05*1 = 9.51 The expected loss = ( 9.51-9.4 )/ 9.51 = 1.2% The recovery rate = (12.7 − 1.2) / 12.7 = 91%

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Discuss some approaches to estimating the probability that a company will default. Explain the key difference between risk-neutral and real-world probabilities of default.
  2. Historical data provided by rating agencies are also used to estimate the probability of default The table shows the probability of default for companies starting with a particular credit rating A company with an initial credit rating of Baa has a probability of 0.181% of defaulting by the end of the first year, 0.506% by the end of the second year, and so on For a company that starts with a good credit rating default probabilities tend to increase with time For a company that starts with a poor credit rating default probabilities tend to decrease with time
  3. The unconditional default probability The default intensity (hazard rate)
  4. 在債務人的違約事件之中,通常債務人所遭受的損失是 『債務人應該償還的金額 &amp; 實際收回的金額 之間的差額』 回收率是根據債務人的求償順位與其擔保品所計算所得
  5. Suppose that a bond yields 200 basis point more than a similar risk-free
  6. 假設 只會在 x.5 時間違約 假設每年違約機率相同 假設違約只會發生一次???
  7. Ratio is high for “investment grade” Ratio decline as credit rating declines Difference increase as credit rating declines
  8. The excess return tends to increase as credit quality declines.