Abstract
This study develops an alternative way to measure default risk and suggests an appropriate method to assess the performance of fixed-income investors over the entire spectrum of credit-quality classes. The approach seeks to measure the expected mortality of bonds and the consequent loss rates in a manner similar to the way actuaries assess mortality of human beings. The results show that all bond ratings outperform riskless Treasuries over a ten-year horizon and that, despite relatively high mortality rates, B-rated and CCC-rated securities outperform all other rating categories for the first four years after issuance, with BB-rated securities outperforming all others thereafter.
Volume
44: 4
Page
909-922
Year
1989
Categories
Financial and Statistical Methods
Asset and Econometric Modeling
Asset Classes
Corporate Bonds
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Enterprise Risk Management
Risk Categories
Financial Risks
Financial and Statistical Methods
Asset and Econometric Modeling
Credit Spreads
Business Areas
Publications
Journal of Finance