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.
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| - 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. (en)
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| - 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.Essentially, 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. The Merton structural default probabilities were first offered by in the early 1990s. KMV LLC was acquired by Moody's Investors Service in 2002. Kamakura Corporation, where Robert Jarrow serves as director of research, has offered both structural and reduced-form default probabilities on public companies since 2002. (en)
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