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Jarrow–Turnbull model

Reduced-form model for valuing credit-risky securities using default intensities


Reduced-form model for valuing credit-risky securities using default intensities

The Jarrow–Turnbull model is a widely used "reduced-form" credit risk model. It was published in 1995 by Robert A. Jarrow and Stuart Turnbull. Under the model, which returns the corporate's probability of default, bankruptcy is modeled as a statistical process. The model extends the reduced-form model of Merton (1976) to a random interest rates framework.

Reduced-form models are an approach to credit risk modeling that contrasts sharply with "structural credit models", the best known of which is the Merton model of 1974. Reduced-form models focus on modeling the probability of default as a statistical process, whereas structural-models inhere a microeconomic model of the firm's capital structure, deriving the (single-period) probability of default from the random variation in the (unobservable) value of the firm's assets. Large financial institutions employ default models of both the structural and reduced-form types.

References

References

  1. Robert A. Jarrow and Stuart Turnbull, "Pricing Derivatives on Financial Securities Subject to [[Credit risk. Credit Risk]]" ''Journal of Finance'', vol. 50, March, 1995
  2. Robert Merton, “Option Pricing When Underlying Stock Returns are Discontinuous” ''Journal of Financial Economics'', 3, January–March, 1976, pp. 125–44.
  3. [[Robert C. Merton]] “On the Pricing of Corporate Debt: The Risk Structure of Interest Rates,” ''Journal of Finance'' 29, 1974, pp. 449–470
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