Saunders & Cornett, Financial Institutions Management, 4th ed. 1 A bank is a place that will lend...

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Saunders & Cornett, Finan cial Institutions Managem ent, 4th ed. 1 “A bank is a place that will lend you money if you can prove that you don’t need it.” Bob Hope

Transcript of Saunders & Cornett, Financial Institutions Management, 4th ed. 1 A bank is a place that will lend...

Page 1: Saunders & Cornett, Financial Institutions Management, 4th ed. 1 A bank is a place that will lend you money if you can prove that you dont need it. Bob.

Saunders & Cornett, Financial Institutions Management, 4th ed.

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“A bank is a place that will lend you money if you can prove that

you don’t need it.”Bob Hope

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Why New Approaches to Credit Risk Measurement and

Management?

Why Now?

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Structural Increase in Bankruptcy• Increase in probability of default

– High yield default rates: 5.1% (2000), 4.3% (1999, 1.9% (1998). Source: Fitch 3/19/01

– Historical Default Rates: 6.92% (3Q2001), 5.065% (2000), 4.147% (1999), 1998 (1.603%), 1997 (1.252%), 10.273% (1991), 10.14% (1990). Source: Altman

• Increase in Loss Given Default (LGD)– First half of 2001 defaulted telecom junk bonds recovered

average 12 cents per $1 ($0.25 in 1999-2000)

• Only 9 AAA Firms in US: Merck, Bristol-Myers, Squibb, GE, Exxon Mobil, Berkshire Hathaway, AIG, J&J, Pfizer, UPS. Late 70s: 58 firms. Early 90s: 22 firms.

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Disintermediation

• Direct Access to Credit Markets– 20,000 US companies have access to US

commercial paper market.– Junk Bonds, Private Placements.

• “Winner’s Curse” – Banks make loans to borrowers without access to credit markets.

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More Competitive Margins

• Worsening of the risk-return tradeoff– Interest Margins (Spreads) have declined

• Ex: Secondary Loan Market: Largest mutual funds investing in bank loans (Eaton Vance Prime Rate Reserves, Van Kampen Prime Rate Income, Franklin Floating Rate, MSDW Prime Income Trust): 5-year average returns 5.45% and 6/30/00-6/30/01 returns of only 2.67%

– Average Quality of Loans have deteriorated• The loan mutual funds have written down loan value

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The Growth of Off-Balance Sheet Derivatives

• Total on-balance sheet assets for all US banks = $5 trillion (Dec. 2000) and for all Euro banks = $13 trillion.

• Value of non-government debt & bond markets worldwide = $12 trillion.

• Global Derivatives Markets > $84 trillion.• All derivatives have credit exposure.• Credit Derivatives.

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Declining and Volatile Values of Collateral

• Worldwide deflation in real asset prices.– Ex: Japan and Switzerland– Lending based on intangibles – ex. Enron.

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Technology

• Computer Information Technology– Models use Monte Carlo Simulations that are

computationally intensive

• Databases– Commercial Databases such as Loan Pricing

Corporation– ISDA/IIF Survey: internal databases exist to

measure credit risk on commercial, retail, mortgage loans. Not emerging market debt.

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BIS Risk-Based Capital Requirements

• BIS I: Introduced risk-based capital using 8% “one size fits all” capital charge.

• Market Risk Amendment: Allowed internal models to measure VAR for tradable instruments & portfolio correlations – the “1 bad day in 100” standard.

• Proposed New Capital Accord BIS II – Links capital charges to external credit ratings or internal model of credit risk. To be implemented in 2005.

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Traditional Approaches to Credit Risk Measurement

20 years of modeling history

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Expert Systems – The 5 Cs

• Character – reputation, repayment history• Capital – equity contribution, leverage.• Capacity – Earnings volatility.• Collateral – Seniority, market value & volatility of

MV of collateral.• Cycle – Economic conditions.

– 1990-91 recession default rates >10%, 1992-1999: < 3% p.a. Altman & Saunders (2001)

– Non-monotonic relationship between interest rates & excess returns. Stiglitz-Weiss adverse selection & risk shifting.

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Problems with Expert Systems

• Consistency– Across borrower. “Good” customers are likely to be

treated more leniently. “A rolling loan gathers no loss.”

– Across expert loan officer. Loan review committees try to set standards, but still may vary.

– Dispersion in accuracy across 43 loan officers evaluating 60 loans: accuracy rate ranged from 27-50. Libby (1975), Libby, Trotman & Zimmer (1987).

• Subjectivity– What are the optimal weights to assign to each factor?

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Credit Scoring Models

• Linear Probability Model• Logit Model• Probit Model• Discriminant Analysis Model• 97% of banks use to approve credit card

applications, 70% for small business lending, but only 8% of small banks (<$5 billion in assets) use for small business loans. Mester (1997).

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Linear Discriminant Analysis – The Altman Z-Score Model

• Z-score (probability of default) is a function of:– Working capital/total assets ratio (1.2)

– Retained earnings/assets (1.4)

– EBIT/Assets ratio (3.3)

– Market Value of Equity/Book Value of Debt (0.6)

– Sales/Total Assets (1.0)

– Critical Value: 1.81

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Problems with Credit Scoring

• Assumes linearity.• Based on historical accounting ratios, not market

values (with exception of market to book ratio).– Not responsive to changing market conditions.

– 56% of the 33 banks that used credit scoring for credit card applications failed to predict loan quality problems. Mester (1998).

• Lack of grounding in economic theory.

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The Option Theoretic Model of Credit Risk Measurement

Based on Merton (1974)

KMV Proprietary Model

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The Link Between Loans and Optionality: Merton (1974)

• Figure 4.1: Payoff on pure discount bank loan with face value=0B secured by firm asset value.– Firm owners repay loan if asset value (upon

loan maturity) exceeds 0B (eg., 0A2). Bank receives full principal + interest payment.

– If asset value < 0B then default. Bank receives assets.

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Using Option Valuation Models to Value Loans

• Figure 4.1 loan payoff = Figure 4.2 payoff to the writer of a put option on a stock.

• Value of put option on stock = equation (4.1) = f(S, X, r, , ) whereS=stock price, X=exercise price, r=risk-free rate, =equity

volatility,=time to maturity. Value of default option on risky loan = equation (4.2) =

f(A, B, r, A, ) whereA=market value of assets, B=face value of debt, r=risk-free

rate, A=asset volatility,=time to debt maturity.

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$ Payoff

Assets0 A1 B A2

Figure 4.1 The payoff to a bank lender

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$ Payoff

Stock Price (S)0

X

Figure 4.2 The payoff to the writer of a put option on a stock.

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Problem with Equation (4.2)

• A and A are not observable.• Model equity as a call option on a firm. (Figure 4.3)• Equity valuation = equation (4.3) =

E = h(A, A, B, r, )

Need another equation to solve for A and A:

E = g(A) Equation (4.4)

Can solve for A and A with equations (4.3) and (4.4) to obtain a Distance to Default = (A-B)/ A Figure 4.4

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Value ofAssets (A)

Value ofEquity (E)

($)

B

L

A1 A20

Figure 4.3 Equity as a call option on a firm.

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B$80m

A$100m

t0 t1 Time(t)

Default Region

A

A

Figure 4.4 Calculating the theoretical EDF

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Merton’s Theoretical PD

• Assumes assets are normally distributed.• Example: Assets=$100m, Debt=$80m, A=$10m• Distance to Default = (100-80)/10 = 2 std. dev.• There is a 2.5% probability that normally

distributed assets increase (fall) by more than 2 standard deviations from mean. So theoretical PD = 2.5%.

• But, asset values are not normally distributed. Fat tails and skewed distribution (limited upside gain).

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Merton’s Bond Valuation Model

• B=$100,000, =1 year, =12%, r=5%, leverage ratio (d)=90%

• Substituting in Merton’s option valuation expression: – The current market value of the risky loan is

$93,866.18– The required risk premium = 1.33%

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KMV’s Empirical EDF

• Utilize database of historical defaults to calculate empirical PD (called EDF):

• Fig. 4.5

Number of firms that defaulted within a year with asset values of 2 from Empirical EDF = B at the beginning of the year Total population of firms with asset values of 2 from B at the beginning of the year

50 Defaults Empirical EDF = Firm population of 1, 000 = 5 percent

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5%

EmpiricalEDF

Figure 4.5default (DD): A hypothetical example.Empirical EDF and the distance to

0 Distanceto Default

(DD)

ProprieteryTrade-Off

2

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Accuracy of KMV EDFsComparison to External Credit Ratings

• Enron (Figure 4.8)• Comdisco (Figure 4.6)• USG Corp. (Figure 4.7)• Power Curve (Figure 4.9): Deny credit to

the bottom 20% of all rankings: Type 1 error on KMV EDF = 16%; Type 1 error on S&P/Moody’s obligor-level ratings=22%; Type 1 error on issue-specific rating=35%.

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12/96 06/97 12/97 06/98 12/98 06/99 12/99 06/00 12/00 06/01

20 CCCCC

B

KMV EDF Credit Measure

Source: KMV.

Agency Rating

BB

BBB

A

AA

AAA

151075

2

1.0

.5

.20

.15

.10

.05

.02

Figure 4.6 KMV expected default frequency TM and agency rating for Comdisco Inc.

12/96 06/97 12/97 06/98 12/98 06/99 12/99 06/00 12/00 06/01

20 CCCCC

B

KMV EDF Credit Measure Agency Rating

BB

BBB

A

AA

AAA

151075

2

1.0

.5

.20

.15

.10

.05

.02

Source: KMV.

Figure 4.7 KMV expected default frequency TM and agency rating for USG Corp.

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Monthly EDF™ credit measure

Agency Rating

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1009080706050

Percent of Population Excluded

40302010

100

90

80

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

00

Figure 4.8

Source: Kealhofer (2000).

agency ratings (1990-1999) for rated U.S. companies.KMV EDF Credit Measure vs.

EDF Power

S&P Company Power

S&P Implied Power

Moodys Implied Power

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Problems with KMV EDF

• Not risk-neutral PD: Understates PD since includes an asset expected return > risk-free rate.– Use CAPM to remove risk-adjusted rate of return. Derives risk-neutral

EDF (denoted QDF). Bohn (2000).

• Static model – assumes that leverage is unchanged. Mueller (2000) and Collin-Dufresne and Goldstein (2001) model leverage changes.

• Does not distinguish between different types of debt – seniority, collateral, covenants, convertibility. Leland (1994), Anderson, Sundaresan and Tychon (1996) and Mella-Barral and Perraudin (1997) consider debt renegotiations and other frictions.

• Suggests that credit spreads should tend to zero as time to maturity approaches zero. Duffie and Lando (2001) incomplete information model. Zhou (2001) jump diffusion model.

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Term Structure Derivation of Credit Risk Measures

Reduced Form Models: KPMG’s Loan Analysis System and Kamakura’s Risk Manager

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Estimating PD: An Alternative Approach

• Merton’s OPM took a structural approach to modeling default: default occurs when the market value of assets fall below debt value

• Reduced form models: Decompose risky debt prices to estimate the stochastic default intensity function. No structural explanation of why default occurs.

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A Discrete Example:Deriving Risk-Neutral Probabilities of Default

• B rated $100 face value, zero-coupon debt security with 1 year until maturity and fixed LGD=100%. Risk-free spot rate = 8% p.a.

• Security P = 87.96 = [100(1-PD)]/1.08 Solving (5.1), PD=5% p.a.

• Alternatively, 87.96 = 100/(1+y) where y is the risk-adjusted rate of return. Solving (5.2), y=13.69% p.a.

• (1+r) = (1-PD)(1+y) or 1.08=(1-.05)(1.1369)

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Multiyear PD Using Forward Rates

• Using the expectations hypothesis, the yield curves in Figure 5.1 can be decomposed:

• (1+0y2)2 = (1+0y1)(1+1y1) or 1.162=1.1369(1+1y1) 1y1=18.36% p.a.

• (1+0r2)2 = (1+0r1)(1+1r1) or 1.102=1.08(1+1r1) 1r1=12.04% p.a.

• One year forward PD=5.34% p.a. from:

(1+r) = (1- PD)(1+y) 1.1204=1.1836(1 – PD)

• Cumulative PD = 1 – [(1 - PD1)(1 – PD2)] = 1 – [(1-.05)(1-.0534)] = 10.07%

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16%

14%

10%

8%

1 Yr. 2 Yr. Time to Maturity

SpotYield

Zero-CouponTreasury Bond

A Rated Zero-Coupon Bond

B Rated Zero-Coupon Bond

11.5%

13.69%

Figure 5.1 Yield curves.

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The Loss Intensity Process

• Expected Losses (EL) = PD x LGD

• If LGD is not fixed at 100% then:(1 + r) = [1 - (PDxLGD)](1 + y)

Identification problem: cannot disentangle PD from LGD.

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Disentangling PD from LGD• Intensity-based models specify stochastic functional

form for PD.– Jarrow & Turnbull (1995): Fixed LGD, exponentially

distributed default process.– Das & Tufano (1995): LGD proportional to bond values.– Jarrow, Lando & Turnbull (1997): LGD proportional to debt

obligations.– Duffie & Singleton (1999): LGD and PD functions of

economic conditions– Unal, Madan & Guntay (2001): LGD a function of debt

seniority.– Jarrow (2001): LGD determined using equity prices.

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KPMG’s Loan Analysis System

• Uses risk-neutral pricing grid to mark-to-market

• Backward recursive iterative solution – Figure 5.2.

• Example: Consider a $100 2 year zero coupon loan with LGD=100% and yield curves from Figure 5.1.

• Year 1 Node (Figure 5.3):– Valuation at B rating = $84.79 =.94(100/1.1204) + .01(100/1.1204)

+ .05(0)

– Valuation at A rating = $88.95 = .94(100/1.1204) +.0566(100/1.1204) + .0034(0)

• Year 0 Node = $74.62 = .94(84.79/1.08) + .01(88.95/1.08)

• Calculating a credit spread:

74.62 = 100/[(1.08+CS)(1.1204+CS)] to get CS=5.8% p.a.

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0 1 2 3

Time

4D

C

B

B RiskGrade

A

Figure 5.2 The multiperiod loan migrates overmany periods.

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Period 1Period 0

Figure 5.3 Risky debt pricing.

Period 2

$100 A Rating

$100 B Rating

$85.43

$67.14$80.28

$0 Default

5%5%

0.34%

94%

94%

1%5.66%

94%

1%

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Noisy Risky Debt Prices• US corporate bond market is much larger than equity

market, but less transparent• Interdealer market not competitive – large spreads and

infrequent trading: Saunders, Srinivasan & Walter (2002)• Noisy prices: Hancock & Kwast (2001)• More noise in senior than subordinated issues: Bohn

(1999)• In addition to credit spreads, bond yields include:

– Liquidity premium– Embedded options– Tax considerations and administrative costs of holding risky debt

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Mortality Rate Derivation of Credit Risk Measures

The Insurance Approach:

Mortality Models and the CSFP Credit Risk Plus Model

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Mortality Analysis

• Marginal Mortality Rates = (total value of B-rated bonds defaulting in yr 1 of issue)/(total value of B-rated bonds in yr 1 of issue).

• Do for each year of issue.• Weighted Average MMR = MMRi =

tMMRt x w where w is the size weight for each year t.

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Mortality Rates - Table 11.10

• Cumulative Mortality Rates (CMR) are calculated as:– MMRi = 1 – SRi where SRi is the survival rate defined as

1-MMRi in ith year of issue.– CMRT = 1 – (SR1 x SR2 x…x SRT) over the T years of

calculation.– Standard deviation = [MMRi(1-MMRi)/n] As the number

of bonds in the sample n increases, the standard error falls. Can calculate the number of observations needed to reduce error rate to say std. dev.= .001

– No. of obs. = MMRi(1-MMRi)/2 = (.01)(.99)/(.001)2 = 9,900

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CSFP Credit Risk Plus Appendix 11B

• Default mode model• CreditMetrics: default probability is discrete (from

transition matrix). In CreditRisk +, default is a continuous variable with a probability distribution.

• Default probabilities are independent across loans.• Loan portfolio’s default probability follows a

Poisson distribution. See Fig.8.1.• Variance of PD = mean default rate. • Loss severity (LGD) is also stochastic in Credit

Risk +.

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Default Rate

BBB Loan

Credit Risk Plus

CreditMetrics

Possible Path of Default Rate

Time Horizon

Default Rate

BBB Loan

Possible Pathof Default Rate D

BBB

AAA

Time Horizon

Figure 8.1Comparison of credit risk plusand CreditMetrics.

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Frequencyof Defaults

Distribution ofDefault Losses

Severityof Losses

Figure 8.2 The CSFP credit risk plus model.

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Distribution of Losses

• Combine default frequency and loss severity to obtain a loss distribution. Figure 8.3.

• Loss distribution is close to normal, but with fatter tails.

• Mean default rate of loan portfolio equals its variance. (property of Poisson distrib.)

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Probability

Model 1

ActualDistributionof Losses

Losses

Figure 8.3 Distribution of losses with defaultrate uncertainty and severity uncertainty.

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Probability

ExpectedLoss

EconomicCapital

99thPercentileLoss Level

Loss0

Figure 8.4 Capital requirement under the CSFPcredit risk plus model.

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Pros and Cons

• Pro: Simplicity and low data requirements – just need mean loss rates and loss severities.

• Con: Inaccuracy if distributional assumptions are violated.

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Divide Loan Portfolio Into Exposure Bands

• In $20,000 increments.• Group all loans that have $20,000 of

exposure (PDxLGD), $40,000 of exposure, etc.

• Say 100 loans have $20,000 of exposure.• Historical default rate for this exposure

class = 3%, distributed according to Poisson distrib.

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Properties of Poisson Distribution

• Prob.(n defaults in $20,000 severity band) = (e-mmn)/n! Where: m=mean number of defaults. So: if m=3, then prob(3defaults) = 22.4% and prob(8 defaults)=0.8%.

• Table 8.2 shows the cumulative probability of defaults for different values of n.

• Fig. 8.5 shows the distribution of the default probability for the $20,000 band.

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.008

.05

.168

.224

Defaults

843210

Figure 8.5 Distribution of defaults: Band 1.

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Loss Probabilities for $20,000 Severity Band

Table 8.2 Calculation of the Probability of Default, Using the Poisson Distribution N Probability Cumulative Probability 0 0.049787 0.049789 1 0.149361 0.199148 2 0.224042 0.42319 3 0.224042 0.647232 . 7 0.021604 0.988095 8 0.008102 0.996197

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Economic Capital Calculations

• Expected losses in the $20,000 band are $60,000 (=3x$20,000)

• Consider the 99.6% VaR: The probability that losses exceed this VaR = 0.4%. That is the probability that 8 loans or more default in the $20,000 band. VaR is the minimum loss in the 0.4% region = 8 x $20,000 = $160,000.

• Unexpected Losses = $160,000 – 60,000 = $100,000 = economic capital.

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0

0.25

0.15

0.05

0.1

0.2

0

Amount of Loss in $

ExpectedLoss

EconomicCapital

UnexpectedLoss

350,000400,000250,000300,000160,000200,00060,000 100,000

Figure 8.6 Loss distribution for single loan portfolio —severity rate = $20,000 per $100,000 loan.

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0

0.25

0.15

0.05

0.1

0.2

0

Amount of Loss in $

350,000400,000250,000300,000150,000200,00050,000 100,000

Figure 8.7 Single loan portfolio — severity rate = $40,000per $100,000 loan.

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Calculating the Loss Distribution of a Portfolio Consisting of 2 Bands:

$20,000 and $40,000 Loss Severity

Aggregate Portfolio (Loss on v = 1, Loss on v = 2) Loss ($) in $20,000 units Probability 0 (0,0) (.0497 x .0497) 20,000 (1,0) (.1493 x .0497) 40,000 [(2, 0) (0,1)] [(.224 x .0497) + (.0497 x.1493)] 60,000 [(3, 0) (1, 1)] [(.224 x .0497) + (.1493)2] 80,000 [(4, 0) (2,l) (0, 2)] [(.168 x.0497) + (.224 x.1493) + (.0497x.224)]

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Add Another Severity Band

• Assume average loss exposure of $40,000

• 100 loans in the $40,000 band

• Assume a historic default rate of 3%

• Combining the $20,000 and the $40,000 loss severity bands makes the loss distribution more “normal.” Fig. 8.8.

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0

0.120

0.060

0.020

0.040

0.080

0.100

0.000

Amount of Loss in $

350,000400,000250,000300,000150,000200,00050,000 100,000

Figure 8.8 Loss distribution for two loan portfolios withseverity rates of $20,000 and $40,000.

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Oversimplifications

• The mean default rate was assumed constant in each severity band. Should be a function of macroeconomic conditions.

• Ignores default correlations – particularly during business cycles.

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Loan Portfolio Selection and Risk Measurement

Chapter 12

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The Paradox of Credit

• Lending is not a “buy and hold”process.

• To move to the efficient frontier, maximize return for any given level of risk or equivalently, minimize risk for any given level of return.

• This may entail the selling of loans from the portfolio. “Paradox of Credit” – Fig. 10.1.

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Return

The EfficientFrontier

A

B

C

Risk0

Figure 10.1 The paradox of credit.

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Managing the Loan Portfolio According to the Tenets of Modern Portfolio Theory

• Improve the risk-return tradeoff by:– Calculating default correlations across assets.– Trade the loans in the portfolio (as conditions

change) rather than hold the loans to maturity.– This requires the existence of a low transaction

cost, liquid loan market.– Inputs to MPT model: Expected return, Risk

(standard deviation) and correlations

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The Optimum Risky Loan Portfolio – Fig. 10.2

• Choose the point on the efficient frontier with the highest Sharpe ratio:– The Sharpe ratio is the excess return to risk

ratio calculated as:

p

fp rR

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Return (Rp)rf

A

BD

C

Risk (p)

Figure 10.2 The optimum risky loan portfolio

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Problems in Applying MPT to Untraded Loan Portfolios

• Mean-variance world only relevant if security returns are normal or if investors have quadratic utility functions.– Need 3rd moment (skewness) and 4th moment

(kurtosis) to represent loan return distributions.

• Unobservable returns– No historical price data.

• Unobservable correlations

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KMV’s Portfolio Manager

• Returns for each loan I:– Rit = Spreadi + Feesi – (EDFi x LGDi) – rf

• Loan Risks=variability around EL=EGF x LGD = UL– LGD assumed fixed: ULi = – LGD variable, but independent across borrowers: ULi =

– VOL is the standard deviation of LGD. VVOL is valuation volatility of loan value under MTM model.

– MTM model with variable, indep LGD (mean LGD): ULi =

)1( EDFEDF

22)1( ii EDFiVOLLGDEDFiEDFi

222 )1()1( iii VVOLEDFiEDFiVVOLLGDEDFiEDFi

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Correlations

• Figure 11.2 – joint PD is the shaded area.GF = GF/GF

GF =

• Correlations higher (lower) if isocircles are more elliptical (circular).

• If JDFGF = EDFGEDFF then correlation=0.

)1()1(

)(

FFGG

FGGF

EDFEDFEDFEDF

EDFEDFJDF

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Firm F

Firm G

Firm F’sDebt Payoff

100

100(1-LGD)

Market Valueof Assets - Firm G

Market Valueof Assets - Firm F

Face Value of Debt

Figure 11.2 Value correlation.