Bankruptcy Prediction With Industry Effects, Market Versus Accounting Variables, And Reduced Form Credit Risk Models
Preprint
- 1 January 2001
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper investigates the forecasting accuracy of bankruptcy hazard rate models for U.S. companies over the time period 1962 - 1999 using both yearly and monthly observation intervals. The contribution of this paper is multiple-fold. One, using an expanded bankruptcy database we validate the superior forecasting performance of Shumway's (2001) model as opposed to Altman (1968) and Zmijewski (1984). Two, we demonstrate the importance of including industry effects in hazard rate estimation. Industry groupings are shown to significantly affect both the intercept and slope coefficients in the forecasting equations. Three, we extend the hazard rate model to apply to financial firms and monthly observation intervals. Due to data limitations, most of the existing literature employs only yearly observations. We show that bankruptcy prediction is markedly improved using monthly observation intervals. Fourth, consistent with the notion of market efficiency with respect to publicly available information, we demonstrate that accounting variables add little predictive power when market variables are already included in the bankruptcy model.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Market Pricing of Deposit InsuranceJournal of Financial Services Research, 2003
- Understanding the Recovery Rates on Defaulted SecuritiesSSRN Electronic Journal, 2003
- Estimating expected losses and liquidity discounts implicit in debt pricesJournal of Risk, 2002
- Modeling Term Structures of Defaultable BondsThe Review of Financial Studies, 1999
- Estimating the Price of Default RiskThe Review of Financial Studies, 1999
- The Bankruptcy Decision and Debt Contract Renegotiations *European Finance Review, 1998
- Differences between COMPUSTAT and CRSP SIC codes and related effects on researchJournal of Accounting and Economics, 1994
- An Introduction to the BootstrapPublished by Springer Nature ,1993
- Discrete-Time Methods for the Analysis of Event HistoriesSociological Methodology, 1982
- Financial Ratios, Discriminant Analysis and the Prediction of Corporate BankruptcyThe Journal of Finance, 1968