Advanced Debt Instruments: 4. Credit Analysis Model
Advanced Debt Instruments: 4. Credit Analysis Model
Advanced Debt Instruments: 4. Credit Analysis Model
Jung-Hyun Ahn
2024
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
Roadmap
This section, we learn a framework providing credit spread based on the factors of
credit risk.
under more rigorous definition of credit risk.
ignore taxation and liquidity risk
Consider a one-year, 4% annual payment corporate bond priced at par. Given 40%
of recovery rate, compute expected exposure, loss severity, and loss given default.
Sol.
EE = 104 per 100 of par value.
Loss Severity = 1 − RR = 1 − 40% = 60% .
LGD = EE× Loss severity = 104 × 0.6 = 62.4 per 100 of par value.
The probability that a bond issuer will not meet its contractual obligation on sched-
ule in a given period.
Conditional Probability of Default (or Hazard Rate, HRt ): Probability of
default in a given period t assuming no prior default.
P Dt = P St−1 × HRt
P St = P St−1 − P Dt
= (1 − HR)t (if hazard rate is constant over all the periods.)
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
P
Credit Valuation Adjustment, CV A = P V of expected loss (EL)
A five-year, $100 par, zero-coupon corporate bond has a hazard rate of 1.25% per
year. Its recovery rate is 40% and the benchmark rate curve is flat at 3%.
3 Calculate the annual internal rate of return (IRR) for the investment under
different default scenarios. Determine the IRR assuming the issuer defaults at
the end of first year (and second, third, fourth and fifth year), as well as the
IRR if the issuer does not default until the maturity of the bond.
Sol.
(2) EEt : PV of par value at the end of year t discounted by risk-free rate.
(3) Recovery amount: = EEt × RR
(4) LGDt = EEt − Recoveryt = EEt × (1 − RR)
(5) P Dt = P St−1 × HR
(6) P St = P St−1 − P Dt (or (1 − HR)t in (6bis))
(7) ELt = P Dt × LGDt
(8) Discount factor for year t: DFt = 1/(1 + st )t where st is t-year risk-free spot rate.
(9) Present Value of Expected loss at t: P V (EL)t = ELt × DFt
P5
CV A = t=1 P V (EL)t = 3.1549 per 100 of par value
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
2 Credit spread
Value of the otherwise equivalenet risk-free bond (VND): PV of the bond using
risk-free rate as the discount rate.
100
V ND = = 86.2609
(1.03)5
Fair Value of risky bond:
= V N D − CV A = 86.2609 − 3.1549 = 83.1060
YTM of the bond: (1/5)
100 100
83.106 = ⇒ Y T M = − 1 = 3.77%
(1 + Y T M )5 83.106
Credit spread = YTM of risky bond - YTM of risk-free bond
= 3.77 − 3.00 = 0.77% or 77 bps
Note: (In CFA L1) The approximation of credit spread commonly used in
practice is computed by P D1 × (1 − RR) = 1.25% × (1 − 0.4) = 0.75%
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
3 IRR: Compute IRR given the price $83.1060 and Cash-flow upon whether and
and default occurs.
Annual IRR if default occurs at the end of year 1:
35.5395
83.1060 = ⇒ IRR = −0.5724, or −57.24%
1 + IRR
Annual IRR if default occurs at the end of year 2:
36.6057 /2
1
0 36.6057
83.1060 = + 2
⇒ IRR = − 1 = −0.3363
1 + IRR (1 + IRR) 83.1060
or −33.63%
In similar way, the annual IRRs if default
occurs at the end of year 3, 4 and 5
are −23.16% , −17.32% , and −13.61% , respectively. (See Excel
solution file.)
Annual IRR, if no default occurs till the maturity of the bond:
0 0 100
83.1060 = + + ··· +
1 + IRR (1 + IRR)2 (1 + IRR)5
100
1/5
⇒ IRR = − 1 = 0.0377 or 3.77%
83.1060
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
Task in practice
The above example is a very simple example of credit risk model. In practice,
we use the risk neutral probabilities of default rather than actual (or
historical) default probabilities.
we may have to analyze coupon bond in which case you consider coupon at
each period as well as present value of the cash flow occuring in the
subsequent periods.
The probability of default implied in the current market price assuming that investors
are risk-neutral.
Consider a one-year, $100 par value, zero-coouon bond trading at $95. The bench-
mark 1-year rate is 3% and the recovery rate is assumed to be 60%. In one year, if
the bond dose not default, it pays promised par value $100, while cash flow will be
only $60 in case of default ($100 × 60%).
p × 60 + (1 − p) × 100
95 = ⇒ p = 5.38%
1.03
Basically, risk-neutral default probability is higher than actual (historical) default probability because the
former does not include
the risk premium associated to the uncertainty related to default loss (average investors are
risk-averse);
liquidity risk and tax consideration.
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
A fixed-income analyst is considering the credit risk over the next year for three cor-
porate bonds currently held in her bond portfolio. Her assessment for the exposure,
probability of default, and recovery is summarized in this table:
Although all three bonds have very similar yields to maturity, the differences in the
exposures arise because of differences in their coupon rates.
Based on these assumptions, how would she rank the three bonds, from highest to
lowest, in terms of credit risk over the next year?
Sol.
B>C>A
Input:
Interest rates elements: Par curve of benchmark bonds, interest rate volatility;
Credit risk factors: recovery rate, hazard rate (conditional probability of default,
initial probability of default, annual probability of default)
Process:
1 Compute spot, forward rate rates and discount factor for each year.
2 Build risk-free interest rate tree (if volatility >0)
3 Compute the value of the bond at each node assuming no default and then VND
(value at t = 0)
4 Compute EE, LGD, PD, EL and CVA for each year(present value of EL)
P
5 CVA = CV At
6 Fair value of risky bond = VND - CVA
7 Credit spread = YTM of risky bond -YTM of risk-free (benchmark) bond
Ex.4.4. Valuing risky bonds: Case with non-flat yield curve and volatility
Consider a five-year, 3.50% annual payment corporate bond. A fixed-income analyst assigns an
annual default probability of 1.25% and a recovery rate of 40% to this bond and assumes 10%
volatility in benchmark interest rates. The following tables presents spot rates, discount factors,
and forward rates extracted from the par curve for annual payment benchmark government bond
and interest rate tree built upon this information.
Estimate the fair value of this bond and the credit spread.
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
Sol.(1)
VND = 103.5450
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
Sol. (2)
Sol. (3)
Sol. (4)
In our analysis, we focus only on the credit risk component (i.e., CVA) as it is the
most important and most-commonly-used in practice.
Credit speads change as investor perceptions about the credit risk changes
Credit spreads increase as the probability of default increases, and as the recovery
rate decreases.
Consider the same bond and interest rates information in Exercise 4.4. The analyst
expects that there will be a severe recession in coming years and that the annual
probability of default will be doubled to 2.5% for two coming years, then if will
return to 1.25% for the remaining period if this bond survives. Estimate the credit
spread based on this new scenario.
Modeling Credit Risk & CVA Valuing risky bond Credit Spread Valuing risky FRN
Joan Da Sliva, an analyst, is estimating the fair price of a 3-year subordinated bond
that XYZ Corporation is considering issuing. It pays 3% coupon rate annually. Da
Silva could not find any bond with the same seniority recently issued by XYZ or
by other entities with similar risk. However, Da Silva found a senior bond with the
same maturity and coupon rates issued recently by XYZ, which is traded at 102.00
per 100 of par value. Currently, the recovery rate of the bond issued by the firms
with the same credit rating as XYZ is estimated as 70% for senior bonds and 40%
for subordinated bonds, respectively.
The benchmark yield curve is flat at 1.75%, and the volatility is assumed to be 0.
Estimate the price and the credit spread of the subordinated bond.
An analyst considers a five-year floater that pays annually the one-year benchmark
rate plus 0.50%. He expects that for the first three years, the annual default
probability is 0.50% and the recovery rate is 20%. However, it is expected that the
credit risk of the issuer then worsens: For the final two years, the annual probability
of default goes up to 0.75% and the recovery rate goes down to 10%. Compute
the fair value of this bond and its discount margin. Use the government par curve
and the binomial interest rate tree in Exercises 4.4.
Notes: FRN
Sol. (1)
Sol. (2)
D − CV A
Fair value of FRN = V N
= 102.3633 − 2.4586 = 99.9047 per 100 of par value
Discount margin: Find the value, when added in the discount rate at each
node, making the price equal to the estimated fair value
(99.9047) of
the
FRN using goal seek function of Excel. −→ 0.5205% or 52.05 bps