Company failure prediction with limited information: newly incorporated companies

Company failure prediction with limited information: newly incorporated companies

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Article ID: iaor201423
Volume: 65
Issue: 2
Start Page Number: 252
End Page Number: 264
Publication Date: Feb 2014
Journal: Journal of the Operational Research Society
Authors: ,
Keywords: risk
Abstract:

Developing ‘Internal Rating Systems’ (IRB) for corporate risk management requires building risk (PD) models geared to the specific characteristics of corporate sub‐populations (eg small and medium‐sized enterprises (SMEs), private companies, listed companies, sector specific models), tuned to changes in the macro environment, and, of course, tailored to the available data. Tracking the risk of ‘newly incorporated companies’ provides a particular challenge since there is very limited publically available data in the time period from incorporation date until the submission of the first accounts. Yet a large number of these companies fail (via bankruptcy). We employ a substantial database to estimate discrete time hazard models (DHM) over the period 2000–2008 (4427896 firm‐year observations and 34903 incidences of insolvency), inclusive of macro and regional economic conditions, that capture early indicators of financial stress and measure aspects of the characteristics of board of directors in order to assess the utility of this type of non‐financial information in failure prediction models.

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