The Role of Recession Forecasts and F-score in Predicting Credit Risks

Authors

  • Kevin Chi-Keung Li The Open University of Hong Kong
  • Eric C.Y. Ng The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
  • Bob Wai-Ho Leung The Open University of Hong Kong

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jaf.v20i6.3316

Keywords:

Accounting, Finance, credit risks, recession forecasts, Piotroski’s F-score

Abstract

An accurate forecast for corporate default risk is crucial for financial institutions to effectively quantify potential expected and unexpected borrower losses. This paper develops a logistic regression model to simultaneously examine the roles of firm-specific fundamentals and economic outlook in predicting corporate default risk. The model is estimated using U.S. listed non-financial firms over the 1997⎼2009 period. The empirical findings suggest that economic outlook captured by recession probability forecast, firm-specific fundamental factors measured by the Z-score and F-score, and the interaction between economic outlook and firm-specific fundamental factors play statistically significant roles in predicting bankruptcy risk. The model exhibits relatively high levels of goodness-of-fit and classification ability, and low levels of forecast error.

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Published

2020-12-09

How to Cite

Li, K. C.-K., Ng, E. C., & Leung, B. W.-H. (2020). The Role of Recession Forecasts and F-score in Predicting Credit Risks. Journal of Accounting and Finance, 20(6). https://doi.org/10.33423/jaf.v20i6.3316

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Section

Articles