The Effect of Company's Interest Coverage Ratio on the Structural and Reduced-Form Models in Predicting Credit Derivatives Price

Derivative pricing models use either fixed or variable interest rates at the corporate level to compensate for the devaluation, which results in an estimated accounting profit caused by the cash inflation at the maturity date. These models also fail to take into account the lost opportunity costs, w...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Iranian journal of management studies 2022-01, Vol.15 (1), p.169-188
Main Authors: Noghondari, Amirhossein Taebi, Zeinali, Hadis, Beytollahi, Asghar
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Derivative pricing models use either fixed or variable interest rates at the corporate level to compensate for the devaluation, which results in an estimated accounting profit caused by the cash inflation at the maturity date. These models also fail to take into account the lost opportunity costs, which are considered a deficiency. Accordingly, the present study set out to remove this problem by adding the company's Interest Coverage Ratio (ICR) to pricing models, which is the novelty of this study. The research data was extracted from the Bloomberg Terminal for an eight-year period from 2008 to 2015. The statistical population of the research included the North American and European companies recognized as the reference entities for Credit Default Swaps (CDS) in the given period, and the statistical sample consisted of 125 companies. The data was analyzed using four Artificial Neural Network (ANN) algorithms, namely ANFIS, NNARX, AdaBoost, and SVM. The research results indicated the increased predictive accuracy of the pricing models under scrutiny after adding the ICR. The findings also shed light on the superiority of the intensity model over the structural model in prognosticating the price of CDS contracts.
ISSN:2008-7055
2345-3745
DOI:10.22059/IJMS.2021.313368.674295