afterworkguinness
Active Member
Hi,
I thought the conditional probability of default (the probability of default in year T given survival up to that point) was hazard*e^(- hazard * time). Putting that to the test in GARPs practice question below yields a close but incorrect value.
Question:
Is the problem asking for conditional PD?
Is this method valid to solve for it, but yields only an approximation?
Problem (Question # 10 GARP's 2015 practice exam):
Hazard rate of 0.1. What is the probability of survival in the first year followed by default in the second?
Given solution:
(phrasing mine)
1 year cumulative (also called unconditional) PD = 1 - e^(- hazard*time) = 9.516%
2 year cumulative (also called unconditional) PD = 1 - e^(- hazard*time) = 18.127%
P(default in year 2 given survival in year 1) = 18.127% - 9.516% = 8.61%
Trying my solution gives 0.1(e^(-0.1*2)) = 8.19%
Malz page 241 seems to support my approach.
I thought the conditional probability of default (the probability of default in year T given survival up to that point) was hazard*e^(- hazard * time). Putting that to the test in GARPs practice question below yields a close but incorrect value.
Question:
Is the problem asking for conditional PD?
Is this method valid to solve for it, but yields only an approximation?
Problem (Question # 10 GARP's 2015 practice exam):
Hazard rate of 0.1. What is the probability of survival in the first year followed by default in the second?
Given solution:
(phrasing mine)
1 year cumulative (also called unconditional) PD = 1 - e^(- hazard*time) = 9.516%
2 year cumulative (also called unconditional) PD = 1 - e^(- hazard*time) = 18.127%
P(default in year 2 given survival in year 1) = 18.127% - 9.516% = 8.61%
Trying my solution gives 0.1(e^(-0.1*2)) = 8.19%
Malz page 241 seems to support my approach.
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