Risk, 15 (12) (2002), 160–162; reprinted in Risk 20 (7) (2007), 130–133; reprinted in A. Lipton (ed.), Theory and Practice of Credit Risk Modelling, London: Risk Books, 2008.
The amount of capital necessary to support a portfolio of debt securities depends on the probability distribution of the portfolio loss. Consider a portfolio of loans, each of which is subject to default resulting in a loss to the lender. Suppose the portfolio is financed partly by equity capital and partly by borrowed funds. The credit quality of the lender's notes will depend on the probability that the loss on the portfolio exceeds the equity capital. To achieve a certain credit rating of its notes (say Aa on a rating agency scale), the lender needs to keep the probability of default on the notes at the level corresponding to that rating (about .001 for the Aa quality). It means that the equity capital allocated to the portfolio must be equal to the percentile of the distribution of the portfolio loss that corresponds to the desired probability.
In addition to determining the capital necessary to support a loan portfolio, the probability distribution of portfolio losses has a number of other applications. It can be used in regulatory reporting, measuring portfolio risk, calculation of value-at-risk (VaR), portfolio optimization and structuring, and pricing debt portfolio derivatives such as collateralized debt obligations (CDO).
In this chapter, we derive the distribution of the portfolio loss under certain assumptions. It is shown that this distribution converges with increasing portfolio size to a limiting type, whose analytical form is given here. The results of the first two sections of this paper are contained in the author's technical notes, Vasicek (1987) and (1991) (Chapters 17 and 18 of this volume). For a review of recent literature on the subject, see, for instance, Pykhtin and Dev (2002).
Assume that a loan defaults if the value of the borrower's assets at the loan maturity T falls below the contractual value B of its obligations payable. Let Ai be the value of the i-th borrower's assets, described by the process
The asset value at T can be represented as
where Xi is a standard normal variable. The probability of default of the i-th loan is then
where
and N is the cumulative normal distribution function.
Consider a portfolio consisting of n loans in equal dollar amounts. Let the probability of default on any one loan be p, and assume that the asset values of the borrowing companies are correlated with a coefficient ρ for any two companies. We will further assume that all loans have the same term T.
Let be the gross loss (before recoveries) on the i-th loan, so that if the i-th borrower defaults and otherwise. Let L be the portfolio percentage gross loss,
If the events of default on the loans in the portfolio were independent of each other, the portfolio loss distribution would converge, by the central limit theorem, to a normal distribution as the portfolio size increases. Because the defaults are not independent, however, the conditions of the central limit theorem are not satisfied and L is not asymptotically normal. It turns out, however, that the distribution of the portfolio loss does converge to a limiting form, which we will now proceed to derive.
The variables Xi in Eq. (1) are jointly standard normal with equal pairwise correlations ρ, and can therefore be represented as
where are mutually independent standard normal variables. (This is not an assumption, but a property of the equicorrelated normal distribution.) The variable Y can be interpreted as a portfolio common factor, such as an economic index, over the interval . Then the term is the company's exposure to the common factor and the term represents the company-specific risk.
We will evaluate the probability of the portfolio loss as the expectation over the common factor Y of the conditional probability given Y. This can be interpreted as assuming various scenarios for the economy, determining the probability of a given portfolio loss under each scenario, and then weighting each scenario by its likelihood.
When the common factor is fixed, the conditional probability of loss on any one loan is
The quantity provides the loan default probability under the given scenario. The unconditional default probability p is the average of the conditional probabilities over the scenarios.
Conditional on the value of Y, the variables Li are independent equally distributed variables with a finite variance. The portfolio loss conditional on Y converges, by the law of large numbers, to its expectation as . Then
and on substitution, the cumulative distribution function of loan losses on a very large portfolio is in the limit
This result is given in Vasicek (1991).
The convergence of the portfolio loss distribution to the limiting form in Eq. (4) actually holds even for portfolios with unequal weights. Let the portfolio weights be w1, with . The portfolio loss
conditional on Y converges to its expectation whenever (and this is a necessary and sufficient condition)
In other words, if the portfolio contains a sufficiently large number of loans without it being dominated by a few loans much larger than the rest, the limiting distribution provides a good approximation for the portfolio loss.
The portfolio loss distribution given by the cumulative distribution function
is a continuous distribution concentrated on the interval . It forms a two-parameter family with the parameters . When , it converges to a one-point distribution concentrated at . When ρ → 1, it converges to a zero-one distribution with probabilities p and , respectively. When or , the distribution becomes concentrated at or , respectively. The distribution possesses a symmetry property
The loss distribution has the density
which is unimodal with the mode at
when , monotone when , and U-shaped when . The mean of the distribution is and the variance is
where is the bivariate cumulative normal distribution function. The inverse of this distribution, that is, the α-percentile value of L, is given by
The portfolio loss distribution is highly skewed and leptokurtic. Table 19.1 lists the values of the α-percentile expressed as the number of standard deviations from the mean for several values of the parameters. The α-percentiles of the standard normal distribution are shown for comparison.
Table 19.1 Values of for the portfolio loss distribution
p | ρ | α = .9 | α = .99 | α = .999 | α = .9999 |
.01 | .1 | 1.19 | 3.8 | 7.0 | 10.7 |
.01 | .4 | .55 | 4.5 | 11.0 | 18.2 |
.001 | .1 | .98 | 4.1 | 8.8 | 15.4 |
.001 | .4 | .12 | 3.2 | 13.2 | 31.8 |
Normal | 1.28 | 2.3 | 3.1 | 3.7 |
These values manifest the extreme non-normality of the loss distribution. Suppose a lender holds a large portfolio of loans to firms whose pairwise asset correlation is and whose probability of default is . The portfolio expected loss is , and the standard deviation is . If the lender wishes to hold the probability of default on his notes at , he will need enough capital to cover 11.0 times the portfolio standard deviation. If the loss distribution were normal, 3.1 times the standard deviation would suffice.
The portfolio loss distribution given by Eq. (4) is the actual probability distribution. This is the distribution from which to calculate the probability of a loss of a certain magnitude for the purposes of determining the necessary capital or of calculating VaR. This is also the distribution to be used in structuring collateralized debt obligations—that is, in calculating the probability of loss and the expected loss for a given tranche. For the purposes of pricing the tranches, however, it is necessary to use the risk-neutral probability distribution. The risk-neutral distribution is calculated in the same way, except that the default probabilities are evaluated under the risk-neutral measure ,
where r is the risk-free rate. The risk-neutral probability is related to the actual probability of default by the equation
where ρM is the correlation of the firm asset value with the market, and is the market price of risk. The risk-neutral portfolio loss distribution is then given by
Thus, a derivative security (such as a CDO tranche written against the portfolio) that pays at time T an amount contingent on the portfolio loss is valued at
where the expectation is taken with respect to the distribution (7). For instance, a default protection for losses in excess of is priced at
So far, we have discussed the loss due to loan defaults. Now suppose that the maturity date T of the loan is past the date H for which the portfolio value is considered (the horizon date). If the credit quality of a borrower deteriorates, the value of the loan will decline, resulting in a loss (this is often referred to as the loss due to credit migration). We will investigate the distribution of the loss resulting from changes in the marked-to-market portfolio value.
The value of the debt at time 0 is the expected present value of the loan payments under the risk-neutral measure,
where G is the loss given default and p* is the risk-neutral probability of default. At time H, the value of the loan is
Define the loan loss Li at time H as the difference between the riskless value and the market value of the loan at H,
This definition of loss is chosen purely for convenience. If the loss is defined in a different way (for instance, as the difference between the accrued value and the market value), it will only result in a shift of the portfolio loss distribution by a location parameter.
The loss on the i-th loan can be written as
where
and the standard normal variables Xi defined over the horizon H by
are subject to Eq. (2).
Let L be the market value loss at time H of a loan portfolio with weights wi. The conditional mean of Li given Y can be calculated as
The losses conditional on the factor Y are independent, and therefore the portfolio loss L conditional on Y converges to its mean value . The limiting distribution of L is then
We see that the limiting distribution of the portfolio loss is of the same type (5) whether the loss is defined as the decline in the market value or the realized loss at maturity. In fact, the results of the section on the distribution of loss due to default are just a special case of this section for .
The risk-neutral distribution for the loss due to market value change is given by
When applying the limiting distribution to an actual portfolio, the parameters p, ρ should be chosen in such a way that the limiting distribution has the same mean and variance as the actual portfolio. The latter calculation is facilitated by the formula for covariance of the loan values at the horizon,
Eq. (8) relies on the convergence of the portfolio loss L given Y to its mean value , which means that the conditional variance . When the portfolio is not sufficiently large for the law of large numbers to take hold, we need to take into account the non-zero value of . Consider a portfolio of uniform credits with weights and put
The conditional variance of the portfolio loss L given Y is
where
The unconditional mean and variance of the portfolio loss are and
Taking the first two terms in the tetrachoric expansion of the bivariate normal distribution function , where n is the normal density function, we have approximately
Approximating the loan loss distribution by the distribution (5) with the same mean and variance, we get
This expression is in fact exact for both extremes and .
Equation (11) provides an adjustment for the “granularity” of the portfolio. In particular, the finite portfolio adjustment to the distribution of the gross loss at the maturity date is obtained by putting to yield
We have shown that the distribution of the loan portfolio loss converges, with increasing portfolio size, to the limiting type given by Eq. (5) (see Figure 19.1). It means that this distribution can be used to represent the loan loss behavior of large portfolios. The loan loss can be a realized loss on loans maturing prior to the horizon date, or a market value deficiency on loans whose term is longer than the horizon period.
The limiting probability distribution of portfolio losses has been derived under the assumption that all loans in the portfolio have the same maturity, the same probability of default, and the same pairwise correlation of the borrower assets. Curiously, however, computer simulations show that the family (5) appears to provide a reasonably good fit to the tail of the loss distribution for more general portfolios. To illustrate this point, Figure 19.2 gives the results of Monte Carlo simulations of an actual bank portfolio. The portfolio consisted of 479 loans in amounts ranging from 0.0002 percent to 8.7 percent, with δ = .039. The maturities ranged from 6 months to 6 years and the default probabilities from .0002 to .064. The loss given default averaged 0.54. The asset returns were generated with 14 common factors. Plotted is the simulated cumulative distribution function of the loss in one year (dots) and the fitted limiting distribution function (solid line).
3.129.67.246