Abstract: Estimates of average default probabilities for borrowers assigned
to each of a financial institution's internal credit risk rating
grades are crucial inputs to portfolio credit risk models. Such
models are increasingly used in setting financial institution capital
structure, in internal control and compensation systems, in
asset-backed security design, and are being considered for use in
setting regulatory capital requirements for banks. This paper
empirically examines properties of the major methods currently used
to estimate average default probabilities by grade. Evidence of
potential problems of bias, instability, and gaming is presented.
With care, and perhaps judicious application of multiple methods,
satisfactory estimates may be possible. In passing, evidence is
presented about other properties of internal and rating-agency
ratings.
Keywords: Credit risk, value at risk, credit ratings, debt default, capital regulation
Full paper (497 KB PDF)
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Last update: October 26, 2000
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