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Identifying at-risk names in your public company C&I portfolio with enough anticipation might allow you to reduce your exposure or take the necessary actions to minimize the losses you could suffer in the event of a credit event. Developing a risk monitoring and early warning system is a time and resource intensive process. This presentation, from a recently held webcast by Moody's Analytics Capital Markets Research Group, addresses developing strategies to identify the relevant measures that could indicate increased risk in your C&I portfolio.
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Identifying At-Risk Names in Your Credit PortfolioDavid T. Hamilton, PhD, Managing Director, Capital Markets Research Group
Irina Makarova, Assistant Director, Capital Markets Research Group
October 2, 2013
Originally presented as a part of a Moody’s Analytics webinar
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“Yes, risk taking is inherently failure-prone. Otherwise, it would be called sure-thing-taking.”
− Jim McMahon
3
Strategies for identifying at-risk names in your portfolio1
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Developing a Monitoring and Early Warning Toolkit
Public Expected Default Frequency (EDF) measures can be utilized in four ways to more effectively monitor risk and signal early warning:
1. EDF level
– EDFs have been shown to be powerful at rank ordering risk
– How can we choose the right EDF warning trigger level?
2. Relative EDF level
– Peer group or industry sector comparisons add incremental predictive power to detect credit risk
3. EDF change
– EDF measures exhibit momentum
4. EDF relative change
– Like relative level, comparisons to a peer or industry group add incremental predictive power
5
Challenges to setting up an effective monitoring and early warning process» System must be set up to detect outcome(s) of
interest/importance
– Default
– Rating change
– Spread movement
» Filters are likely to be very sensitive to time period, peer group, time horizon, etc.
» Triggers should also be a function of the economic importance of the exposure
» Process can only filter results, cannot dictate actions
6
Effective credit risk monitoring using EDF measures
» Monitoring and early warning are problems of classification: which firms in a portfolio should be considered relatively more risky, and therefore merit deeper investigation?
» Estimating the benefits and costs of classification may be difficult, imprecise, or impossible
» We may therefore attempt to maximize predictive accuracy of classification instead
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Assessing risk classification accuracy
Actual Outcome
Low Risk High Risk
Predicted by Credit Measure
Low Risk True Negative False Negative
High Risk False Positive True Positive
A credit risk measure, like an EDF or a rating, makes a prediction that will turn out to be correct or not. There are thus four types of classification error.
FNTP
TPTPR
FPTN
FPFPR
We can also define two useful measures of accuracy from this table:
The overall predictive power of any risk measure is determined by both the TPR and FPR
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Developing an optimal early warning signal
We can calibrate an optimal early warning trigger level by measuring the TPR and FPR for a given trigger value.
Finding the optimal trigger levels entails three steps:
1. Choose a candidate EDF trigger level
2. Measure the TPR and FPR associated with the EDF trigger level
3. The optimal EDF trigger level is the one that maximizes (TPR – FPR)
t *Percentile Rank
Median25th Percentile
75th Percentile
2.673% 82.701% 0.251% 0.084% 1.224%
Optimal EDF early trigger level, global public companies, 1997-2012
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Optimal EDF triggers for select industry sectors
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Sectort *
(Pctile)
Banks0.281%
(75.464%)
Consumer Products0.247%
(65.045%)
High Tech13.715%
(95.489%)
Transportation4.344%
(83.923%)
Global public companies, 1997-2011
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Static EDF early warning triggers are not optimal
Box plots of EDF measures for US Firms, January 2008 vs. January 2009
0
10
20
30
40
ED
F %
Jan 2008 Jan 2009
Review Trigger Level
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The optimal trigger will vary significantly over the cycle
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Firms whose EDF measures are high relative to their industry sectors experience higher default rates
Relative EDF Level
Quartile 1 2 3 4
1 0.02% 0.10% 0.35% 0.72%
EDF 2 0.05% 0.31% 0.45% 1.71%
Level 3 0.00% 0.29% 0.77% 2.78%
4 NA 2.64% 2.68% 6.65%
One-year default rates conditioned on EDF quartile and relative EDF quartile
Default risk increases when EDFs are relatively high
Default risk rises with EDF level
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Negative EDF momentum signals higher default riskOne-year default rates conditioned on EDF momentum
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Default rates are sensitive to EDF momentum vs. sector
One-year default rates conditioned on EDF decile and EDF change vs. sector change
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ALL1 0.05% 0.03% 0.02% 0.00% 0.00% 0.01% 0.03% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 0.02%2 0.10% 0.05% 0.06% 0.06% 0.00% 0.00% 0.02% 0.07% 0.11% 0.27% 0.05%3 0.10% 0.06% 0.01% 0.03% 0.01% 0.03% 0.07% 0.06% 0.03% 0.18% 0.05%4 0.28% 0.12% 0.17% 0.15% 0.09% 0.10% 0.08% 0.09% 0.17% 0.30% 0.15%5 0.32% 0.23% 0.24% 0.32% 0.22% 0.24% 0.21% 0.27% 0.22% 0.46% 0.27%6 0.62% 0.44% 0.45% 0.34% 0.44% 0.56% 0.44% 0.72% 0.51% 0.97% 0.55%7 0.71% 0.56% 0.66% 0.80% 0.64% 0.72% 0.73% 1.06% 1.18% 1.63% 0.89%8 1.01% 1.01% 1.19% 1.25% 1.27% 1.44% 1.58% 1.65% 2.05% 3.10% 1.68%9 3.14% 2.22% 4.83% 5.16% 5.25% 4.34% 4.87% 5.75% 6.37% 8.39% 5.60%10 6.43% 4.68% 5.76% 7.70% 7.70% 6.96% 7.67% 9.31% 9.99% 13.70% 8.94%All 0.66% 0.63% 1.08% 1.73% 1.73% 1.83% 2.24% 2.92% 3.13% 5.96% 2.16%
Firm
EDF
Leve
l
EDF Change Relative to Industry Peer Group Change
Default risk increases with poor performance vs. industry
Default risk rises with EDF level
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Developing a monitoring and early warning playbook
Our research suggests a general approach to effective early warning using EDF measures:
1. Calibrate an appropriate EDF trigger level for your portfolio. Names in excess of the trigger are statistically more likely to default and should be analyzed further
2. For names that exceed the trigger EDF, check their EDF levels relative to their industry sectors. Names in the 75th or worse percentile are of particular concern.
3. Also check the EDF momentum for these names. Firms whose EDFs have worsened in the past are likely to continue to worsen, and are more likely to default than other firms with the same EDF level
4. Last, when an firm’s EDF momentum is underperforming its industry sector, it is more likely to default than other firms with the same EDF level
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Strategies in practice: Case study2
17
JC Penney’s EDF metric has increased sharply over the past year, but how concerned should we be?
» Coming out of the financial crisis and recession, JC Penney’s EDF measure fell from 3.5% to 0.5% in 1Q2012
» Since 1Q2012, its EDF measure has increased sharply, reaching an all-time high of 7.9% in September 2013
» The optimal EDF trigger for the US department stores group is 0.9% on average
» Compared to Sears, which one is riskier?
Sep-0
8
Dec-0
8
Mar
-09
Jun-
09
Sep-0
9
Nov-0
9
Feb-1
0
May
-10
Aug-1
0
Oct
-10
Jan-
11
Apr-1
1
Jul-1
1
Sep-1
1
Dec-1
1
Mar
-12
Jun-
12
Aug-1
2
Nov-1
2
Feb-1
3
May
-13
Jul-1
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
STRATEGY 1: EDF LEVEL
Sep-0
8
Dec-0
8
Mar
-09
Jun-
09
Sep-0
9
Nov-0
9
Feb-1
0
May
-10
Aug-1
0
Oct
-10
Jan-
11
Apr-1
1
Jul-1
1
Sep-1
1
Dec-1
1
Mar
-12
Jun-
12
Aug-1
2
Nov-1
2
Feb-1
3
May
-13
Jul-1
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Sep-0
8
Dec-0
8
Mar
-09
Jun-
09
Sep-0
9
Nov-0
9
Feb-1
0
May
-10
Aug-1
0
Oct
-10
Jan-
11
Apr-1
1
Jul-1
1
Sep-1
1
Dec-1
1
Mar
-12
Jun-
12
Aug-1
2
Nov-1
2
Feb-1
3
May
-13
Jul-1
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Sears JC Penney
Source: CreditEdge
1-Y
ea
r E
DF
(%
)
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Is a 6% EDF high? How risky is JC Penney?
» Mapping PDs into ratings can be useful rules of thumb, to grasp levels and make relative comparisons
» Here, we map EDFs into ratings using historical default rates
» JC Penney’s current 6% EDF maps to a B3 rating, suggesting a relatively high risk of default
» Sears’ EDF has improved to 1.5% as of Sept., equivalent to a Ba3 rating Se
p08
Dec08
Mar09
Jun0
9
Sep0
9
Dec09
Mar10
Jun1
0
Sep1
0
Dec10
Mar11
Jun1
1
Sep1
1
Dec11
Mar12
Jun1
2
Sep1
2
Dec12
Mar13
Jun1
3
Sep1
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
1-Y
ear
ED
F (
%)
Caa1
B3
B2
B1
Ba3
Ba2
Baa3Ba1
STRATEGY 1: EDF LEVEL
Sep0
8
Dec08
Mar09
Jun0
9
Sep0
9
Dec09
Mar10
Jun1
0
Sep1
0
Dec10
Mar11
Jun1
1
Sep1
1
Dec11
Mar12
Jun1
2
Sep1
2
Dec12
Mar13
Jun1
3
Sep1
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
1-Y
ear
ED
F (
%)
Caa1
B3
B2
B1
Ba3
Ba2
Baa3Ba1
Sears JC Penney
Source: CreditEdge
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As JC Penney’s EDF has risen, its relative EDF level shows that it is risky for its industry sector
» Between 2008 and 2012, JCP’s EDF has either outperformed or tracked the median EDF of its industry sector
» Over the past year its EDF has deteriorated in both absolute and relative terms, and is now trending in the 75th percentile of its industry sector
» Firms whose EDF levels are in the 75th percentile of their sectors are 4.5X more likely to default than those below the 75th percentile
Sep0
8
Jan0
9
May
09
Sep0
9
Jan1
0
May
10
Sep1
0
Jan1
1
May
11
Sep1
1
Jan1
2
May
12
Sep1
2
Jan1
3
May
13
Sep1
30.0
0.1
1.0
10.0
100.0
US Department Stores Group EDF
1-Y
ear
ED
F (
%,
log s
cale
)
75%
Median
25%
STRATEGY 2: RELATIVE LEVEL
Source: CreditEdge
20
The sharp jump in JCP’s EDF suggests that risk is more likely to increase than to decrease in the future
STRATEGY 3: EDF CHANGE
» JCP’s EDF has increased at an accelerating rate, doubling roughly every six months since the start of 2012
» Although JC Penney’s EDF has fallen recently, its EDF is more likely to continue to increase than to decrease over the next year
» Sears is an interesting contrast: its EDF has been higher longer, but has basically moved sideways since its 2011 spike
Jan-
11
Mar
-11
Apr-1
1
Jun-
11
Jul-1
1
Sep-1
1
Oct
-11
Dec-1
1
Jan-
12
Mar
-12
Apr-1
2
May
-12
Jul-1
2
Aug-1
2
Oct
-12
Nov-1
2
Jan-
13
Feb-1
3
Apr-1
3
May
-13
Jun-
13
Aug-1
3
Sep-1
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
1-Y
ear
ED
F (
%)
Source: CreditEdge
JC Penney
Sears
21
The deterioration in JCP’s EDF was also in sharp contrast with general improvement in its sector’s EDFs
» Since 2012, the whole distribution of EDF levels for the US department stores sector has shifted lower
» JCP’s EDF has underperformed its sector since 2Q2012
» The change in its EDF relative to its sector places it in the 90th percentile, making it twice as likely to default than companies at the median
STRATEGY 4: RELATIVE CHANGE
Jan1
1
May
11
Oct11
Feb1
2
Jun1
2
Oct12
Feb1
3
Jun1
30.0
0.1
1.0
10.0
US Department Stores Group
1-Y
ear
ED
F (
%,
log s
cale
)
75%
Median
25%
Source: CreditEdge
22
Case study key take-aways
JC Penney Sears
EDF Level 6% 1.5%
Relative Level 75th pctile 70th pctile
Momentum +1,227% -17%
Relative Momentum 90th pctile 55th pctile
» The four EDF-based early warning strategies add powerful tools for monitoring credit risk; each adds incremental information over EDF level alone
» The strategies can be implemented as part of a formal early warning process or used in name-by-name judgmental analysis
» So, who is riskier? JC Penney or Sears?
23
Conclusion3
24
Summary
» Using EDF measures as the key metric, we showed how to develop an early warning “playbook” using four key monitoring strategies
» These strategies have the advantage of being intuitive and relatively easy to calibrate and implement with available data
» In the JC Penney case study we applied these strategies to show how to differentiate between two companies that, by appearance, seem equally risky
» The strategies can be used a basis for a synthetic early warning signal, or as part of an automated early warning process
25
Putting It All Together: A Traffic Light Approach
EDF Level
ED
F R
elat
ive
Leve
l EDF Change
26
Q & A
27
Contact
Join the conversation on LinkedIn: Credit Edge – Best Practices in Credit Risk
David T. HamiltonManaging DirectorQuantitative Credit ResearchCapital Markets Research Group
Moody’s Analytics7 World Trade CenterNew York, NY 10007
+1 212 553-1695 tel+1 212 298-6934 [email protected]
Irina MakarovaAssistant DirectorQuantitative Credit ResearchCapital Markets Research Group
Moody’s Analytics7 World Trade CenterNew York, NY 10007
+1 212 553-4307 tel+1 212 298-6934 [email protected]
28
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