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Research Article

An alternative Z-score measure for downside bank insolvency risk

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ABSTRACT

We derive a Z-score measure reflecting downside bank insolvency risk, drawing on a Chebyshev inequality in terms of the lower semivariance. As then illustrated empirically for US banks, this may provide a useful alternative, or robustness check, to the more commonly used Z-score measure based on the standard Chebyshev inequality.

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Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1 For some recent papers using this methodology, see e.g. Pino and Sharma (Citation20l9), Caiazza et al. (Citation20l8), Berger et al. (Citation20l6), Doumpos, Gaganis, and Pasiouras (Citation20l5), Vazquez and Federico (Citation20l5), Hakenes et al. (Citation20l4), Berger, Goulding, and Rice (Citation20l4), Delis, Hasan, and Tsionas (Citation20l4), Fang, Hasan, and Marton (Citation20l4), Fu, Lin, and Molyneux (Citation20l4).

2 The standard Chebyshev inequality states that for a random variable X with finite mean μ and variance σ2, it holds for any k>0 that PXμkσ2/k2 (see e.g. Ross Citationl997, p. 396).

3 See also the Appendix for an analogous comparison of corresponding probability bounds when using an alternative interpretation of the traditional Z-score Z that draws on the one-sided Chebyshev inequality instead (see Lepetit and Strobel Citation2015).

4 Stata code for the calculation of these measures is available from the authors on request.

5 For a discussion of different approaches to the construction of time-varying Z-score measures see Lepetit and Strobel (Citation20l3).

6 The one-sided Chebyshev inequality states that for a random variable X with finite mean μ and variance σ2, it holds for any a>0 that PXμaσ2σ2+a2 (see CitationRoss l997, p. 414, or previously, Feller Citation1971, 152).

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