Corporate Probability of Default: A Single-Index Hazard Model Approach

Shaobo Li, Shaonan Tian, Yan Yu*, Xiaorui Zhu, Heng Lian

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Corporate probability of default (PD) prediction is vitally important for risk management and asset pricing. In search of accurate PD prediction, we propose a flexible yet easy-to-interpret default-prediction single-index hazard model (DSI). By applying it to a comprehensive U.S. corporate bankruptcy database we constructed, we discover an interesting V-shaped relationship, indicating a violation of the common linear hazard specification. Most importantly, the single-index hazard model passes the Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit calibration test while neither does a state-of-the-art linear hazard model in finance nor a parametric class of Box-Cox transformation survival models. In an economic value analysis, we find that this may translate to as much as three times of profit compared to the linear hazard model. In model estimation, we adopt a penalized-spline approximation for the unknown function and propose an efficient algorithm. With a diverging number of spline knots, we establish consistency and asymptotic theories for the penalized-spline likelihood estimators. Furthermore, we reexamine the distress risk anomaly, that is, higher financially distressed stocks deliver anomalously lower excess returns. Based on the PDs from the proposed single-index hazard model, we find that the distress risk anomaly has weakened or even disappeared during the extended period.

© 2022 American Statistical Association
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1288–1299
JournalJournal of Business and Economic Statistics
Volume41
Issue number4
Online published11 Oct 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Research Keywords

  • Asset pricing
  • Bankruptcy prediction
  • Nonparametric
  • Penalized splines
  • Survival

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