Assessing Corporate Creditworthiness
Qualitative Factors Quantitative Factors
Qualitative Factors Quantitative Factors
Non-Sovereign Government Debt Agencies
Qualitative Factors Quantitative Factors
Credit spread risk is the risk of greater expected loss due to changes in credit conditions as a result of macroeconomic, market, and/or issuer-related factors. Macroeconomic Factors Market Factors Issuer-Specific Factors The Price Impact of Spread Changes
Credit Ratings Credit Rating Considerations
Fixed-income investors face credit risk, a form of performance risk in a contractual relationship. A borrower that fails to meet its promised interest and/or principal payment obligations under a bond or loan contract is said to be in default. A fixed-income investor seeks compensation for the expected economic loss under a potential borrower default over the…
The approaches taken so far to estimate duration and convexity statistics using mathematical formulas is often referred to as analytical duration; the measures we have covered are summarised as follows: In practice, there is another important type of duration: Fixed-income professionals often use historical data in statistical models that incorporate various factors affecting bond prices to…
Key rate duration (or partial duration) is a measure of a bond’s sensitivity to a change in the benchmark yield at a specific maturity. Such a measure is important to isolate the price responses of bonds to changes in the rates of key maturities on the benchmark yield curve. Key rate durations define a security’s price…
Just as with yield-based interest rate risk measures, effective duration and effective convexity can be used to estimate the percentage change in a bond’s full price for a given shift in the benchmark yield curve (∆Curve),