Abstract

Predicting corporate default risk has long been a crucial topic in the finance field, as bankruptcies impose enormous costs on market participants as well as the economy as a whole. This paper aims to forecast frailty-correlated default models with subjective judgements on a sample of U.S. public non-financial firms spanning January 1980–June 2019. We consider a reduced-form model and adopt a Bayesian approach coupled with the Particle Markov Chain Monte Carlo (Particle MCMC) algorithm to scrutinize this problem. The findings show that the 1-year prediction for frailty-correlated default models with different prior distributions is relatively good, whereas the prediction accuracy ratios for frailty-correlated default models with non-informative and subjective prior distributions over various prediction horizons are not significantly different.

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