Abstract

In a default event, several obligors simultaneously experience financial difficulty in servicing their debt to the point where the entire market can experience a sudden yet significant jump to a credit default. To help protect lenders against a jump-to-default event, regulators require banks to hold capital equivalent to the default risk charge as a buffer against the losses they may incur. The Basel regulatory committee has articulated and set default risk modelling guidelines to improve comparability amongst banks and enable a consistent bank-wide default risk charge estimation. Emerging markets are unique because they usually have illiquid markets and sparse data. Thus, implementing an emerging market default risk model and, at the same time, complying with the regulatory guidelines can be non-trivial. This research presents a framework for modelling the default risk charge in emerging markets in line with the regulatory requirements. The default correlation model inputs are derived and empirically calibrated using emerging market data. The paper ends with some considerations that regulators, supervisors, and banks can use to get financial institutions to adopt an emerging markets default risk charge model.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call