1 / 40

Credit Risk Analysis

Credit Risk Analysis. What is a bond?. A long-term debt instrument in which a borrower agrees to make payments of principal and interest, on specific dates, to the holders of the bond. Creditors receive interest and principal payments they have been promised.

filbert
Download Presentation

Credit Risk Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Credit Risk Analysis

  2. What is a bond? • A long-term debt instrument in which a borrower agrees to make payments of principal and interest, on specific dates, to the holders of the bond. • Creditors receive interest and principal payments they have been promised

  3. What determines interest rates of corporate bonds? ki = k* + IP + MRP+DRP + LP ki = required return on a debt security k* = real risk-free rate of interest IP = inflation premium MRP = maturity risk premium (also called interest rate risk premium) DRP = default risk premium LP = liquidity premium

  4. Default risk • If an issuer defaults, investors receive less than the promised return. Therefore, the expected return on corporate bonds might be less than the promised return. • Default risk is influenced by the issuer’s financial strength and the terms of the bond contract.

  5. Default Risk • A bond also has legal rights attached to it: • if the borrower doesn’t make the required payments, bondholders can force bankruptcy proceedings • in the event of bankruptcy, bond holders get paid before equity holders

  6. Bankruptcy • Two main chapters of the Federal Bankruptcy Act: • Chapter 11, Reorganization • Chapter 7, Liquidation • Chapter 11 bankruptcy is a financial reorganization in which the company continues to operate and works with creditors to formulate repayment plans. • Chapter 7 bankruptcy is a complete liquidation in which the firm ceases operations and sells all assets. • Typically, a company wants Chapter 11, while creditors may prefer Chapter 7.

  7. Credit rating • Rely on qualitative and quantitative analyses • Standard & Poor’s (AAA to D) • Intermediate “+/-” scores • Moody’s (Aaa to C) • Intermediate “1,2,3” scores • Fitch (AAA to D)

  8. Rating Criteria Bond Quality Ratings Rating Grades Standard & Poor’s Moody’s Highest grade AAA Aaa High grade AA Aa Upper medium A A Lower medium BBB Baa Marginally speculative BB Ba Highly speculative B B, Caa Default D Ca, C

  9. Now more competition! • Of the more than 130 credit-rating agencies, the SEC has granted only five the designation NRSROs: Moody's, S&P, A.M. Best, Dominion Bond Rating Service, and Fitch Ratings. • President Bush Signs Rating Agency Reform Act on October 2006 • A credit-rating company with three years of experience that meets certain standards would be allowed to register with the SEC as a “nationally recognized statistical ratings organization (NRSRO)."

  10. Rating Debt Obligations Ratings and Yields Source: Standard & Poor’s, 2002

  11. Factors affecting default risk and bond ratings • Financial performance • Debt ratio • Current ratio • Other ratios • Be aware of accounting distortions • Bond contract provisions • Secured vs. Unsecured debt • Senior vs. subordinated debt • Guarantee • Debt maturity

  12. Standard & Poor’s rating method • EBIT interest coverage • EBITDA interest coverage • Funds from operations/Total debt % • Free operating cash flow/Total debt % • Return on capital % • Operating income/Sales • Long-term debt/Capital • Total debt/Capital

  13. Financial distress • Financial distress can also be directly predicted.

  14. Prediction of bankruptcy • Bankruptcy prediction models are used in the same way as the bond ratings prediction models. • Dependent variable is a dummy variable indicating whether or not the firm went bankrupt. • Beaver (1966) investigated the use of financial ratios in the bankruptcy prediction. The results clearly indicate that values of the financial ratios differ between failed and non-failed firms.

  15. Prediction of financial distressUnivariate models • Beaver (1966) relied on • Cash flow to total debt • Net income to total assets • Total debt to total assets • Working capital to total assets • Current ratio

  16. Example: Cash flow / total debt

  17. Example (cont.): Net income / total assets

  18. Example (cont.): Total debt / total assets

  19. Example (cont.): Working capital / total assets

  20. Example (cont.): Current ratio

  21. Predicting Financial Distress Altman Z-Score X1 = Working capital/Total assets X2 = Retained earnings/Total assets X3 = Earnings before interest and taxes/Total assets X4 = Shareholders’ market value/Total liabilities X5 = Sales/Total assets Z<1.81 implies a high probability of bankruptcy Z>2.99 implies a low probability of bankruptcy 1.81<Z<2.99 implies an ambiguous area

  22. Prediction of financial distressMultivariate models • Altman Z-score • (Current assets – current liabilities)/total assets • Retained earnings/Total assets • EBIT/Total assets • Preferred and common stock market value/Book value of liabilities • Sales/Total assets • Nokia = 9.88 • Motorola = 1.71 (below the 2.99 nonbankrupt benchmark)

  23. Motorola, Note 8Off-balance-sheet financing • “At December 31, 2001, future minimum lease obligations, net of minimum sublease rentals, for the next five years and beyond are as follows: 2002—$150 million; 2003—$117 million; 2004—$97 million; 2005—$76 million; 2006—$63 million; beyond—$90 million.” • The present value of these payments, at 7%, is $484 million • Inclusion of these items increases debt by 5%

  24. Nokia debt note detailOperating lease payments

  25. Elements of Free Operating Cash Flow

  26. Debt Analysis Ratios

  27. More Recent Advances in Distress Prediction • RiskCalc • Market (Merton) Model

  28. RiskCalc™ “The model's key advantage derives from Moody's unique and proprietary middle market private firm financial statement and default database (Credit Research Database), which comprises 28,104 companies and 1,604 defaults. Our main insights and conclusions are: … Comprehensive testing and validation suggest that RiskCalc's predictive power is superior to that of other publicly available benchmark models and is robust across non-financial industry sectors, and over time. RiskCalc™ was developed to achieve maximum predictive power with the smallest number of inputs. It requires just 10 financial ratios & indicators computed from 17 basic financial inputs. RiskCalc's predictive power derives, in part, from its meticulous transformation of input financial ratios….” Source: RiskCalc™ For Private Companies: Moody's Default Model , may 2000

  29. Transforming raw ratios

  30. From Raw Data to Ratios

  31. Contribution of Factors

  32. Market Model (Not required) • Banks can use the theory of option pricing to assess the credit risk of a corporate borrower • The probability of default is positively related to: • the volatility of the firm’s stock • the firm’s leverage • A model developed by KMV corporation is being widely used by banks for this purpose

More Related