Posts Tagged ‘credit score’
Interest and currency markets affect a loan
Monday, April 26, 2010 9:37 Comments OffI once worked with a telecommunications company whose mission included the goal “to maximize our stock portfolio.” The leadership decided this meant they should partner with a financial institution in order to manage their portfolio more efficiently. What they needed was a partner to help them—an investment bank—but what they did was acquire a bank [...]
Why credit risk is something to bear in mind
Saturday, January 2, 2010 18:38 Comments OffThe asymmetric distribution of corporate bond returns is easily explained by the Merton model introduced earlier. Numerous studies substantiate that even the return distributions of less risky and more liquid asset classes like government bonds are skewed and leptokurtic. Moreover, index returns exhibit significant autocorrelation that can be explained partially by a permanent component. Basically, [...]
The true volatility of payday loans
Saturday, December 19, 2009 19:01 Comments OffA special situation occurs in the high-yield sector. The illiquidity in large parts of the universe causes price lags meaning that the aforementioned small changes in credit quality are not immediately reflected in bond prices. In the economic literature, this effect is known as non-trading. With respect to high-yield indices non-trading and non-synchronous trading of [...]
How to prepare a credit portfolio
Sunday, November 22, 2009 13:21 Comments OffClearly investors willing to allocate a part of their budget to corporate bonds are facing two questions. First, they have to decide how much of their budget they want to invest in corporate bonds. In this context we will focus on a pure fixed income portfolio. Usually private as well as institutional investors define their [...]
The most appropriate measure of corporate leverage
Sunday, October 25, 2009 21:53 Comments OffWhile the choice of the most appropriate measure of corporate leverage is an arbitrary task, empirical studies indicate that the financing gap is able to explain a lot of the variance in credit spreads. It is defined as the difference between capital expenditures, including outlays for inventories, and the amount of cash that corporations need [...]
Free cash flow numbers are not available for all companies
Friday, October 23, 2009 11:56 Comments OffYet, free cash flow numbers are not available for all companies. European firms, for example, historically have published only profit figures. Therefore, we also look at EBIT and EBITDA figures. Of these two the latter is preferred because it deducts cash that is needed to maintain the operations. Specifically, on the macro level we use [...]