Abstract

Bond rating agencies examine the financial outlook of a company and the characteristics of a bond issue and assign a rating that indicates an independent assessment of the degree of default risk associated with the firm’s bonds. Predicting this bond rating has been of interest to potential investors as well as to the firm. Prior research in this area has primarily relied upon traditional statistical methods to develop models with reasonably good prediction accuracy. This article utilizes a neural network approach to modeling the bond rating process in an attempt to increase the overall prediction accuracy of the models. A comparison is made to a more traditional logistic regression approach to classification prediction. The results indicate that the neural networks-based model performs significantly better than the logistic regression model for classifying a holdout sample of newly issued bonds in the 1990–92 period. A potential drawback to a neural network approach is a tendency to overfit the data which could negatively affect the model’s generalizability. This study carefully controls for overfitting and obtains significant improvement in bond rating prediction compared to the logistic regression approach. © 1997 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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