Abstract
Predicting the corporate default probability accurately is the core of credit risk management. There has been a relatively small amount of the literature on predicting a firm’s forward default risk. In particular, we wish to emphasize certain features of the panel data that are often overlooked in the analysis of default forecasting. First, the panel data are observed at discrete-time points with a large unit of time such as month, quarter, or year. Second, repeated survival status outcomes from the same firm are highly correlated. Thus, the continuous-time treatment or an independence assumption is often violated in practice. To avoid these potential drawbacks, we propose an extension of the discrete-time forward hazard model by assigning a frailty variable specifically to each firm. We use a real panel dataset to illustrate the proposed methodology. Using the dataset, our results first support the significance of including the firm-specific frailty variable in the extended model. Then, using an expanding rolling window approach, our results confirm that the extended model provides better and more robust out-of-sample performance than its alternative without frailty. Thus, accounting for firm-specific frailty can consistently yield more accurate predictions of firms’ forward default probabilities.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank the reviewers for their valuable comments and suggestions that have greatly improved the presentation of this paper. The National Science and Technology Council of Taiwan provides support for this research.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).