Model risk on credit risk
J. Molins, E. Vives

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Jungle model for credit portfolios, capturing credit contagion, systemic risks, and complex loss distributions, providing new insights into default clustering and systemic credit events.
Contribution
The Jungle model is a novel framework that models credit contagion, doubly-peaked loss distributions, and quasi phase transitions, unifying various sources of default clustering.
Findings
Jungle model accurately captures credit contagion effects.
Doubly-peaked distributions explain systemic credit events.
Model handles inhomogeneous portfolios with state-dependent recovery.
Abstract
This paper develops the Jungle model in a credit portfolio framework. The Jungle model is able to model credit contagion, produce doubly-peaked probability distributions for the total default loss and endogenously generate quasi phase transitions, potentially leading to systemic credit events which happen unexpectedly and without an underlying single cause. We show the Jungle model provides the optimal probability distribution for credit losses, under some reasonable empirical constraints. The Dandelion model, a particular case of the Jungle model, is presented, motivated and exactly solved. The Dandelion model provides an explicit example of doubly-peaked probability distribution for the credit losses. The Diamond model, another instance of the Jungle model, experiences the so called quasi phase transitions; in particular, both the U.S. subprime and the European sovereign crises are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCredit Risk and Financial Regulations · Economic, financial, and policy analysis · Stochastic processes and financial applications
