FrançaisEnglish

Érudit | Dépôt de documents >
CIRPÉE - Centre interuniversitaire sur le risque, les politiques économiques et l'emploi >
Cahiers de recherche du CIRPÉE >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:

https://depot.erudit.org//id/001104dd

Title: Estimation of the Default Risk of Publicly Traded Canadian Companies
Authors: Dionne, Georges
Laajimi, Sadok
Mejri, Sofiane
Petrescu, Madalina
Keywords: Default risk
Public firm
Structural model
Reduced form model
Hybrid model
Probit model
Toronto Stock Exchange
Correlations between default probabilities
Issue Date: 2006-04
Series/Report no.: Cahiers du CIRPÉE;06-13
Abstract: In this paper, we investigate the hybrid contingent claim approach with publicly traded Canadian companies listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Our goal is to assess how combining their continuous valuation by the market with the value given in their financial statements improves our ability to predict their probability of default. Our results indicate that the predicted structural probabilities of default (PDs from the structural model) contribute significantly to explaining default probabilities when PDs are included alongside the retained accounting variables. We also show that quarterly updates to the PDs add a large amount of dynamic information to explain the probabilities of default over the course of a year. This flexibility would not be possible with a reduced-form model. We also conducted a preliminary analysis of correlations between structural probabilities of default for the firms in our database. Our results indicate that there are substantial correlations in the studied data.
URI: http://132.203.59.36/CIRPEE/cahierscirpee/2006/files/CIRPEE06-13.pdf
https://depot.erudit.org/id/001104dd
Appears in Collections:Cahiers de recherche du CIRPÉE

Files in This Item:

CIRPEE06-13.pdf, (Adobe PDF ; 624.79 kB)

Items in the Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

About Érudit | Subscriptions | RSS | Terms of Use | Contact us |

Consortium Érudit ©  2016