The comparison of empirical methods for modeling credit ratings of industrial companies from BRICS countries
Alexander M. Karminsky (),
Sergei Grishunin,
Natalya Dyachkova () and
Maxim Bisenov ()
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Alexander M. Karminsky: Higher School of Economics
Natalya Dyachkova: Higher School of Economics
Maxim Bisenov: Plekhanov Russian University of Economics
Eurasian Economic Review, 2020, vol. 10, issue 2, No 8, 333-348
Abstract:
Abstract We compared the ability of various empirical methods to reproduce public credit ratings (PCRs) of industrial companies (ICs) from BRICS countries using publicly available information. This task is important for researchers and practitioners because many of BRICS’ ICs lack PCRs from reputable rating agencies such as Moody’s, Standard and Poor’s, and Fitch. This paper aimed at filling the gap in the existing research as insufficient efforts were focused on prediction of PCRs of ICs from the entire BRICS IC community. The modeled variables are credit ratings (CRs) of 208 BRICS’ ICs assigned by Moody’s at the year-end from 2006 to 2016. The sample included 1217 observations. Financial explanatory variables included companies’ revenue, operating profitability, interest coverage ratio, debt/book capitalization, and cash flow debt coverage. Non-financial explanatory variables included dummies for home region, industry, affiliation with the state, and a set of macroeconomic data of IC’s home countries. The set of statistical methods included linear discriminant analysis (LDA), ordered logit regression (OLR), support vector machine (SVM), artificial neural network (ANN), and random forest (RF). The resulting models were checked for in-sample and out-of-sample predictive fit. Our findings revealed that among considered methods of artificial intelligence models (AI), SVM, ANN, and RF outperformed LDA and OLR by predictive power. On testing sample, AI gave on average 55% of precise results and up to 99% with an error within one rating grade; RF demonstrated the best outcome (58% and 100%). Conversely, LDA and OLR on average gave only 37% of precise results and up to 70% with an error within one grade. LDA and OLR also gave higher share of Type I errors (overestimation of ratings) than that of AI. Therefore, AI should have higher practical application than DA and OLR for predicting the ratings of BRICS ICs.
Keywords: Credit rating modeling; Industrial company; Linear discriminant analysis; Ordered logit model; Artificial intelligence methods (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2020
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DOI: 10.1007/s40822-019-00130-4
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