Taiwan Ratings' 2007 Corporate Default And Rating Transition Study

2008/05/08

 
Analyst:

Eunice Fan
Susan Chu
Daisuke Fukutomi


Coverage

Taiwan Ratings Corp.'s default and rating transition study examines the track record of ratings rated by Taiwan Ratings since it first assigned credit ratings in 1998. The study shows that the rating performance has been broadly similar to Standard & Poor's Ratings Services' global experience; however, rating movements have been more volatile, especially at lower rating levels. The study primarily measures rating movements over time and provides a quantitative measure of rating performance.

This report covers 215 solicited issuer credit ratings rated by Taiwan Ratings between 1998 and 2007, inclusive. The study analyzes the rating performance of Taiwan-based obligors, which include industrials, utilities, insurance companies, financial holding companies, banks, securities firms, and other financial institutions. The study includes nonconfidentially and confidentially rated entities, as well as those whose ratings were withdrawn after being assigned.

Key Findings

  • The credit quality of rated obligors in Taiwan generally showed an upward trend in 2007, but ratings on the banking sector appeared more divergent given the accelerated industry restructuring in 2007.
  • There were five defaults recorded in 2007, including four distressed banks being taken over by Taiwan's regulators and one bank conducted a debt-for-equity swap. We consider these default records to be attributable to the drastic change in financial market behavior along with the trend of flight to quality.
  • The positive correlation between credit ratings and defaults is a valid premise for ratings in Taiwan Ratings' pool, as it is for Standard & Poor's global pool. Nonetheless, it should be noted that the default records of year one to year five (see table 2) would better represent this positive correlation, as the total rating base gained greater statistical relevance since late 2002. Before that, the rated pool was somewhat small leading to unusually higher default rates for year six to year nine.
  • Taiwan Ratings' rating transition in 1998-2007 broadly mirrors Standard & Poor's global study over 1981-2007, which reveals that higher rated issuers exhibit higher stability than their lower rated counterparts do. It should be noted, though, that Taiwan Ratings' rating transition tends to be faster and more volatile compared to Standard & Poor's global ratings pool, because of the difference between national and global rating scales, and the statistical limitations of a smaller sample and shorter rating history of Taiwan Ratings.

Credit Quality Of Domestic Obligors On Upward Trend in 2007

The credit quality of rated obligors generally showed an upward trend in 2007, especially for large corporates and members of large financial groups. Nevertheless, ratings on the banking sector appeared more divergent given the accelerated industry restructuring and intensified competition in recent years.

As for the rating distribution, the majority of issuers in Taiwan continued to be rated 'twA' or above at the end of 2007. This explains the somewhat stable credit profile of higher-rated issuers, as well as the majority of new credits rated 'twA' or above (see table 1), given that higher-rated companies have a better incentive to obtain ratings, particularly on the corporate side. The share of 'twA' or above ratings stood at a similar 81% at the end of 2007 compared to 80% in 2006 (see chart 1).

Table 1

Rating Classification Of New Issuers

¡@

Initial rating (%)

Year

twAAA

twAA

twA

twBBB

twBB

twB

twCCC/CC

1998

6.06

6.06

15.15

48.48

24.24

0.00

0.00

1999

3.70

18.52

18.52

25.93

18.52

14.81

0.00

2000

3.57

10.71

14.29

21.43

39.29

10.71

0.00

2001

4.00

12.00

28.00

28.00

28.00

0.00

0.00

2002

2.86

20.00

40.00

2.86

20.00

14.29

0.00

2003

0.00

23.53

5.88

11.76

47.06

11.76

0.00

2004

0.00

6.67

40.00

20.00

26.67

6.67

0.00

2005

6.67

26.67

33.33

20.00

13.33

0.00

0.00

2006

11.11

44.44

22.22

22.22

0.00

0.00

0.00

2007

11.11

44.44

0.00

11.11

22.22

11.11

0.00

% of total

4.91

21.30

21.74

21.18

23.93

6.94

0.00

Source: Standard & Poor's Global Fixed Income Research. Standard & Poor's CreditPro® 7.72; Taiwan Ratings' Database.

 

Ratings Are Good Indicator Of Default Probability

Our 'Default and Rating Transition Study' generally supports a positive correlation between rating levels and default probability, broadly similar to the observations of Standard & Poor's 'Global Corporate Default Study'. Nonetheless, the overall default experience in Taiwan's rated pool will continue to develop, given its smaller sample and shorter time frame compared to Standard & Poor's global experience. Our study has a smaller number of issuers (215 entities as of the end of 2007) and a shorter study period (1999-2007) in comparison with Standard & Poor's global (13,162 entities; 1981-2007) study. In particular, the default rates of the early-years of Taiwan Ratings' established pool (before late 2002; year six to year nine in this study) are largely limited by the somewhat small rating base.

The default record of our pool experienced a surge in 2007 along with Taiwan government's cleanup actions on weak banks. Five issuers defaulted in 2007, including three in selective default (SD) and two in regulatory supervision (twR). This is a big jump compared to the one default (placed on twR) in 2006, and has brought the total number of defaults in Taiwan's entire ten-year pool to nine (8 financial institutions and 1 industrial company).

The 3 banks rated SD were The Chinese Bank (rated twB-/Developing before SD), Bowa Commercial Bank Ltd. (Bowa Bank; rated twB-/Developing before SD), and Cosmos Bank (twBBB/Positive/twA-3; rated twBBB/CreditWatch Negative/twA-3 before SD). The SD on The Chinese Bank and Bowa Bank reflects their missing interest payments on several outstanding subordinated debentures issued after July 2005. When the regulator took over control of two of the aforementioned banks we placed their ratings on twR in 2007. By law, Taiwan's Financial Restructuring Fund (FRF) will provide protection on deposit obligations, and those obligations specifically identified prior to July 2005. As for Cosmos Bank, we lowered its counterparty ratings to 'SD' at the date of execution of a debt-for-equity swap, in which certain creditors suffered economic losses relative to the face value of their bondholding. Nonetheless, the rating on Cosmos Bank was simultaneously raised to its previous rating level of 'twBBB' with a positive outlook to reflect its improved credit strength after completing a recapitalization plan.

The two issuers rated 'twR' were Enterprise Bank of Hualien and China United Trust & Invest Corporation, which were placed under regulatory supervision due to their failure to meet regulatory capital requirements. We revised our ratings on these issuers to "twR" from "twBB/Negative/twB" following regulator's intervention.

For the purpose of global consistency, financial institutions that are placed under regulatory supervision are classified as default records in this study. Placing a financial institution under regulatory supervision, or 'twR', however, does not necessarily indicate a default event, but the regulator may have the power to favor one class of obligations over others or pay some obligations and not others. Among the six institutions rated 'twR' by Taiwan Ratings between 2000 and 2007, four had generally served their debt obligations, as they did not have debts beyond the legal scope of the government's protection as defined by the regulation (i.e. non-deposit debts issued after July 2005). The two with actual default records are the aforementioned The Chinese Bank and Bowa Bank.

Taiwan Ratings' issuer rating pool is statistically smaller and less diversified than Standard & Poor's global ratings pool. For example, analysis of the data in tables 2 and 3 indicate that the historical cumulative average default rates of all rated issuers in Taiwan are higher than those of the global pool after year six (from year six to year nine). This is mainly driven by the very small sample at the first few years when Taiwan Ratings' began rating services (33 issuers in Jan. 1999, 60 in Jan. 2000, and 86 in Jan. 2001).

In addition, our small sample in lower-rated pools also leads to higher default rates for those categories, e.g. 27.3% cumulative average default rate for the 'twBBB' pool in year nine. Moreover, about 66% of rated issuers are financial institutions (see table 4), which experienced wider industry restructuring than the corporate sector in recent years. Some small banks and bills finance companies rated in the 'twBB' category in the late 1990s had been absorbed by higher-rated or financially stronger entities, and contributed to a lower default rate in year 9 for 'twBB' category compared to 'twBBB'. Furthermore, there has been no 'twCCC'-rated issuer in recent years, reflecting the generally satisfactory credit profiles of our corporate pool, as well as the potential system/resource supports from regulators to financial institutions--especially for banks.

The default records of year-one to year-five (see table 2), better represents the positive correlation between ratings and default, as the total rating base increased and became statistically relevant after 2002.

Table 2
Taiwan Cumulative Average Default Rates, 1999-2007 (%)
Rating
Y1
Y2
Y3
Y4
Y5
Y6
Y7
Y8
Y9
twAAA
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
twAA
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
twA
0.37
0.82
1.42
1.42
1.42
1.42
1.42
1.42
1.42
twBBB
1.40
2.90
3.45
4.08
4.08
5.17
8.50
14.04
27.27
twBB
2.38
4.25
5.56
6.26
8.01
10.25
12.05
16.05
16.05
twB
0.00
7.14
10.86
10.86
16.10
23.73
34.62
67.31
N.A.
twCCC/CC
0.00
0.00
10.00
40.00
64.00
82.00
100.00
N.A.
N.A.
All Rated
0.84
1.93
2.80
3.70
4.88
6.58
9.25
13.33
18.75
Source: Standard & Poor's Global Fixed Income Research. Standard & Poor's CreditPro® 7.72; Taiwan Ratings' Database.

 

Table 3

Global Cumulative Average Default Rates, 1981-2007 (%)

¡@

Time Horizon (years)

Rating

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15

AAA

0.00
0.00
0.09
0.18
0.28
0.41
0.48
0.59
0.63
0.67
0.67
0.67
0.67
0.73
0.79

AA

0.01
0.05
0.09
0.19
0.29
0.40
0.52
0.62
0.71
0.81
0.91
0.99
1.09
1.17
1.21

A

0.06
0.16
0.29
0.45
0.64
0.85
1.11
1.32
1.53
1.76
1.95
2.11
2.26
2.39
2.61

BBB

0.23
0.65
1.13
1.75
2.38
2.98
3.47
3.96
4.42
4.89
5.37
5.75
6.22
6.68
7.20

BB

1.00
2.93
5.19
7.36
9.30
11.19
12.72
14.05
15.27
16.24
17.13
17.87
18.51
18.96
19.43

B

4.57
10.06
14.72
18.39
21.08
23.19
24.94
26.37
27.55
28.74
29.80
30.70
31.61
32.47
33.26

CCC/C

25.59
34.06 39.04 41.86 44.50 45.62 46.67 47.25
48.86
49.76
50.50
51.26
51.87
52.50 52.50

All rated

1.45
2.91
4.21
5.33
6.26
7.06
7.73
8.30
8.81
9.29
9.72
10.08
10.44
10.76 11.09

Source: Standard & Poor's Global Fixed Income Research. Standard & Poor's CreditPro® 7.72.

 

Table 4 

New Issuer Sector Breakdown

¡@

Financial
institutions
Industrials and utilities
Total
1998
31
2
33
1999
22
6
27
2000
24
5
28
2001
10
15
25
2002
27
8
35
2003
8
9
17
2004
6
9
15
2005
7
8
15
2006
5
4
9
2007
3
6
9
Total
143
72
215
% of total
66.5
33.5
100.0

Source: Standard & Poor's Global Fixed Income Research. Standard & Poor's CreditPro® 7.72; Taiwan Ratings' Database.

 

Taiwan's Rating Transitions Largely Mirror Global And Regional Rating Behavior

The results of our transition study largely mirror Standard & Poor's global and regional observations that higher-rated issuers tend to exhibit less ratings volatility than their lower rated counterparts do. For instance, the probability that a Taiwan issuer rated 'twAA' at the beginning of a year will be rated 'twAA' at the end of the year is 92.5% (see table 5), whereas the probability that an issuer rated 'twBB' at the beginning of a year will be rated 'twBB' at the end of the year is only 60.1%. The probability that a global issuer rated 'AA' will retain this rating after one year is 87.5%, whereas the probability that a global issuer rated 'BB' will retain this rating after one year is only 75.6%. The same relationship holds true among the Asia (excluding Japan) rated issuers.

Taiwan Ratings' higher-rated categories appear extremely stable, however, our lower-rated categories registered faster rating movements than Standard & Poor's global and regional rated pools, as a result of our issuer rating pool being statistically small and set over a short period, as well as the volatility inherent in smaller and/or weaker financial institutions. Caution is required in interpreting the higher stability rates associated with the 'twCCC/twCC' rating category relative to the 'twB' rating category in light of the extremely small sample size. In addition, the somewhat high number of withdrawals diluted the rating stability at the 'twB' rating category.

Taiwan Ratings' study has a smaller number of issuers (215 entities as of the end of 2007) and a shorter study period (1999-2007) in comparison with the global (13,162 entities; 1981-2007) and the Asia (excluding Japan; 644 entities; 1988-2007) studies. Statistically, a smaller number of observations and a shorter time frame may potentially contribute to wider deviations of estimation from the findings of the larger number of observations. The higher volatility in our lower rating categories also reflects the characteristics of domestic ratings, which have finer gradations and thus make our ratings more sensitive to changes in the credit profiles of rated issuers.

Table 5
Average One-Year Transition Rates (%)
Taiwan Ratings' issuer ratings (1998-2007)
From/To
twAAA
twAA
twA
twBBB
twBB
twB
twCCC/CC
twD
N.R.
twAAA
92.31
3.85
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
3.85
twAA
2.82
92.49
0.94
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
3.76
twA
0.00
10.00
83.33
1.85
0.37
0.00
0.00
0.37
4.07
twBBB
0.00
0.47
13.95
71.16
2.33
0.00
0.00
1.40
10.70
twBB
0.00
0.00
1.19
14.88
60.12
1.19
0.60
2.38
19.64
twB
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
14.29
42.86
10.71
0.00
32.14
twCCC/CC
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
40.00
0.00
60.00
0.00
0.00
Global issuer ratings (1981-2007)
From/To
AAA
AA
A
BBB
BB
B
CCC/CC
D
N.R.
AAA
88.53
7.70
0.46
0.09
0.09
0.00
0.00
0.00
3.15
AA
0.60
87.50
7.33
0.54
0.06
0.10
0.02
0.01
3.84
A
0.04
2.07
87.21
5.36
0.39
0.16
0.03
0.06
4.67
BBB
0.01
0.17
3.96
84.13
4.03
0.72
0.16
0.23
6.61
BB
0.02
0.05
0.21
5.32
75.62
7.15
0.78
1.00
9.84
B
0.00
0.05
0.16
0.28
5.92
73.00
3.96
4.57
12.05
CCC/CC
0.00
0.00
0.24
0.36
1.02
11.74
47.38
25.59
13.67
Asia ex-Japan issuer ratings (1993-2007)
From/To
AAA
AA
A
BBB
BB
B
CCC/CC
D
N.R.
AAA
89.47
10.53
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
AA
1.33
86.67
10.67
0.00
0.00
1.33
0.00
0.00
0.00
A
0.00
2.15
89.95
4.55
0.24
0.72
0.00
0.00
2.39
BBB
0.00
0.00
7.45
79.53
5.75
1.35
0.17
0.34
5.41
BB
0.00
0.00
0.00
6.31
76.16
2.81
1.26
0.56
12.90
B
0.00
0.00
0.21
0.21
10.27
67.76
2.26
1.64
17.66
CCC/CC
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
14.71
52.94
13.24
19.12
Source: Standard & Poor's Global Fixed Income Research. Standard & Poor's CreditPro® 7.72; Taiwan Ratings' Database.
Note: N.R.--not rated.

Long-term rating transition relationships (see table 6) remain true even when unrated entities at some point during their rating history are removed from consideration.

 

Table 6
Average One-Year N.R.-Removed Transition Rates (%)
Taiwan Ratings' issuer ratings (1998-2007)
From/To
twAAA
twAA
twA
twBBB
twBB
twB
twCCC/CC
twD
twAAA
96.00
4.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
twAA
2.93
96.10
0.98
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
twA
0.00
10.47
87.21
1.94
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.39
twBBB
0.00
0.52
15.63
79.69
2.60
0.00
0.00
1.56
twBB
0.00
0.00
1.49
18.66
75.37
1.49
0.75
2.24
twB
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
21.05
63.16
15.79
0.00
twCCC/CC
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
40.00
0.00
60.00
0.00
Global issuer ratings (1981-2007)
From/To
AAA
AA
A
BBB
BB
B
CCC/CC
D
AAA
91.43
7.92
0.47
0.09
0.09
0.00
0.00
0.00
AA
0.63
91.02
7.61
0.56
0.05
0.10
0.02
0.01
A
0.04
2.17
91.49
5.62
0.41
0.17
0.03
0.06
BBB
0.01
0.17
4.22
90.15
4.30
0.75
0.17
0.23
BB
0.02
0.06
0.22
5.89
83.97
7.89
0.86
1.08
B
0.00
0.06
0.19
0.32
6.71
83.19
4.50
5.03
CCC/CC
0.00
0.00
0.28
0.42
1.20
13.69
55.47
28.93
Asia ex-Japan issuer ratings (1993-2007)
From/To
AAA
AA
A
BBB
BB
B
CCC/CC
D
AAA
89.47
10.53
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
AA
1.33
86.67
10.67
0.00
0.00
1.33
0.00
0.00
A
0.00
2.21
92.16
4.66
0.25
0.74
0.00
0.00
BBB
0.00
0.00
7.89
84.23
6.09
1.43
0.18
0.18
BB
0.00
0.00
0.00
7.27
87.56
3.23
1.45
0.48
B
0.00
0.00
0.25
0.25
12.50
82.50
2.75
1.75
CCC/CC
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
18.52
66.67
14.81
Source: Standard & Poor's Global Fixed Income Research. Standard & Poor's CreditPro® 7.72; Taiwan Ratings' Database. 

 

Global observations reveal that lower-rated credits generally move toward lower categories; however, lower-rated credits (or even most categories) in our pool tended to move up rather than down.

The ratings in our domestic-oriented pool exhibited higher volatility than the ratings in Standard & Poor's global pool. The frequency of annual rating changes in Taiwan ranged between 12% and 72% in 1999-2007 and averaged 36% over the same period (see table 7). This contrasts with the annual rating changes in Standard & Poor's global pool, which ranged between 24% and 34% in 1997-2007 and averaged 28% over the same period (see table 8). Standard & Poor's Asia (excluding Japan) study also highlighted higher rating volatility, which was offset to some extent by its larger pool and longer length of observation (see table 9).

The high ratio of annual rating changes in our pool also reflects the large-scale rating adjustment conducted in December 2004. This was mainly the result of important developments in the financial services industry, including accelerating integration within financial holding company (FHC) groups, improvements in risk management across major participants, and continuing government supports to maintain a stable financial system. The adjustment also resulted in a lower downgrade-to-upgrade ratio for Taiwan Ratings' pool that averaged 0.3 times in 1999-2007 in comparison with 1.6 times for Standard & Poor's regional and global pools.

Table 7
Summary Of Annual Ratings Changes In Taiwan
Year
Issuers as of
Jan. 1
Upgrades (%)
Downgrades (%)
Defaults (%)*
Withdrawn ratings (%)
Changed ratings (%)
Unchanged ratings (%)
Downgrade/ upgrade ratio
1999
33
           9.09
0.00
0.00
3.03
12.12
87.88
0.00
2000
60
           3.33
13.33
1.67
5.00
23.33
76.67
4.00
2001
86
           2.33
12.79
0.00
8.14
23.26
76.74
5.50
2002
104
         18.27
19.23
0.00
11.54
49.04
50.96
1.05
2003
129
         15.50
3.88
0.00
10.85
30.23
69.77
0.25
2004
134
         58.21
2.99
0.00
11.19
72.39
27.61
0.05
2005
136
         13.24
0.74
0.74
8.82
23.53
76.47
0.06
2006
141
         16.31
3.55
0.71
10.64
31.21
68.79
0.22
2007
133
         19.55
3.76
3.76
5.26
32.33
67.67
0.19
Weighted average (1999-2007)
         19.98
6.17
0.84
9.00
35.98
64.02
0.31
Source: Standard & Poor's CreditPro ® 7.72; Taiwan Ratings' Database.
Note: All intermediate ratings are disregarded.
*Excludes downgrades to 'D', shown separately in the default column.

 

Table 8
Summary Of Global Annual Rating Changes, 1997-2007
Year
Issuers as of Jan. 1
Upgrades (%)
Downgrades (%)*
Defaults (%)
Withdrawn ratings (%)
Changed ratings (%)
Unchanged ratings (%)
Downgrades/ upgrades
1997
3,536
8.99
7.86
0.62
7.30
24.77
75.23
0.87
1998
4,138
7.27
11.38
1.28
8.14
28.08
71.92
1.56
1999
4,581
5.59
11.48
2.10
8.69
27.85
72.15
2.05
2000
4,765
6.69
11.69
2.41
7.03
27.83
72.17
1.75
2001
4,854
5.52
15.74
3.73
7.33
32.32
67.68
2.85
2002
4,896
5.19
18.77
3.49
6.90
34.35
65.65
3.62
2003
4,925
6.27
14.25
1.87
7.27
29.66
70.34
2.27
2004
5,162
8.47
7.32
0.77
7.19
23.75
76.25
0.86
2005
5,467
12.38
9.05
0.57
8.32
30.33
69.67
0.73
2006
5,649
11.93
8.36
0.46
8.32
29.07
70.93
0.70
2007
5,889
13.47
9.00
0.36
9.90
32.72
67.28
0.67
Weighted average
8.39
11.35
1.45
7.12
28.31
71.69
1.56
Source: Standard & Poor's CreditPro ® 7.72.
Note: All intermediate ratings are disregarded.
*Excludes downgrades to 'D', shown separately in the default column.

 

Table 9
Summary of Asia ex-Japan Rating Changes, 1998-2007
Year
Average no. of issuers*
Upgrades (%)
Downgrades (%)¶
Defaults (%)
Withdrawn ratings (%)
Changed ratings (%)
Unchanged ratings (%)
Downgrade/ upgrades
1998
119
3.36
47.90
8.40
10.92
70.59
29.41
14.25
1999
117
3.42
13.68
5.13
16.24
38.46
61.54
4.00
2000
148
9.46
4.05
2.03
6.08
21.62
78.38
0.43
2001
161
8.07
4.35
4.35
6.83
23.60
76.40
0.54
2002
170
18.24
13.53
1.18
7.65
40.59
59.41
0.74
2003
240
10.83
5.42
0.42
8.33
25.00
75.00
0.50
2004
268
18.66
2.61
0.00
4.85
26.12
73.88
0.14
2005
308
34.42
2.92
0.32
4.87
42.53
57.47
0.08
2006
349
8.88
3.15
0.29
23.50
35.82
64.18
0.35
2007
344
13.95
6.10
0.29
9.30
29.65
70.35
0.44
Weighted average
14.70
7.64
1.44
10.21
33.99
66.01
1.30
Source: Standard & Poor's CreditPro ® 7.72.
Note: All intermediate ratings are disregarded.
*Average of the number of issuers on the first and last days of each year.  ¶Excludes downgrades to 'D', shown separately in the default column.

 

Default Implications Of Ratings Transition

As the rating performance of Taiwan Ratings' scale continues to develop, including the size of the rated pool and the length of rating history, the default and rating transition is likely to closely mirror Standard & Poor's global study after its issuer pool undergoes testing through future business cycles. However, there remains a major difference in the implicit default risk between Standard & Poor's global scale and Taiwan Ratings' scale. Our scale is primarily positioned as the national scale and does not reflect sovereign risk (Taiwan is rated AA-/Stable/A-1+ by Standard & Poor's Rating Services).

Based on Standard & Poor's historic observations, cumulative default rates may be projected into the future, based on the assumption that the rating transition rates are stable. The one-year and three-year default rate columns in table 10 are equivalent to or about the level of the respective D (default) columns in table 11. The slight difference in results between the two tables mainly stems from the different static pools used to calculate transition to default and cumulative average default rates. Cumulative average default rates are the summary of all static pools, while the number of pools used in the average transition rate is limited by the transition's time horizon.

Table 10   
Global Cumulative Average Default Rates, 1981-2007 (%)

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Time Horizon (years)
Rating
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
AAA
0.00
0.00
0.09
0.18
0.28
0.41
0.48
0.59
0.63
0.67
0.67
0.67
0.67
0.73
0.79
AA
0.01
0.05
0.09
0.19
0.29
0.40
0.52
0.62
0.71
0.81
0.91
0.99
1.09
1.17
1.21
A
0.06
0.16
0.29
0.45
0.64
0.85
1.11
1.32
1.53
1.76
1.95
2.11
2.26
2.39
2.61
BBB
0.23
0.65
1.13
1.75
2.38
2.98
3.47
3.96
4.42
4.89
5.37
5.75
6.22
6.68
7.20
BB
1.00
2.93
5.19
7.36
9.30
11.19
12.72
14.05
15.27
16.24
17.13
17.87
18.51
18.96
19.43
B
4.57
10.06
14.72
18.39
21.08
23.19
24.94
26.37
27.55
28.74
29.80
30.70
31.61
32.47
33.26
CCC/C
25.59
34.06
39.04
41.86
44.50
45.62
46.67
47.25
48.86
49.76
50.50
51.26
51.87
52.50
52.50
All rated
1.45
2.91
4.21
5.33
6.26
7.06
7.73
8.30
8.81
9.29
9.72
10.08
10.44
10.76
11.09
Source: Standard & Poor's Global Fixed Income Research. Standard & Poor's CreditPro® 7.72.

 

Table 11 
Average Multi-Year Transition Matrices, 1981 - 2007 (%)

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One-year transition rates
From/To
AAA
AA
A
BBB
BB
B
CCC/CC
D
N.R.

AAA

88.53
7.70
0.46
0.09
0.09
0.00
0.00
0.00
3.15

AA

0.60
87.50
7.33
0.54
0.06
0.10
0.02
0.01
3.84

A

0.04
2.07
87.21
5.36
0.39
0.16
0.03
0.06
4.67

BBB

0.01
0.17
3.96
84.13
4.03
0.72
0.16
0.23
6.61

BB

0.02
0.05
0.21
5.32
75.62
7.15
0.78
1.00
9.84

B

0.00
0.05
0.16
0.28
5.92
73.00
3.96
4.57
12.05

CCC/CC

0.00
0.00
0.24
0.36
1.02
11.74
47.38
25.59
13.67

¡@

Three-year transition rates

From/To

AAA
AA
A
BBB
BB
B
CCC/CC
D
N.R.

AAA

68.78
18.76
2.50
0.39
0.12
0.03
0.03
0.09
9.29

AA

1.40
66.97
17.65
2.31
0.39
0.24
0.02
0.09
10.93

A

0.09
4.78
67.15
12.03
1.51
0.61
0.11
0.31
13.42

BBB

0.04
0.49
9.36
60.57
7.79
2.26
0.40
1.21
17.87

BB

0.02
0.09
0.78
11.42
43.73
11.90
1.42
5.48
25.16

B

0.01
0.06
0.42
1.35
11.44
37.38
4.31
15.91
29.12

CCC/CC

0.00
0.00
0.35
1.04
2.36
15.32
13.31
40.61
27.03
Source: Standard & Poor's Global Fixed Income Research. Standard & Poor's CreditPro® 7.72.
N.R.--not rated.

 

Appendix: Default Methodology And Definitions

This long-term corporate default and rating transition study uses the CreditPro? 7.72 database of long-term issuer credit ratings. An issuer credit rating reflects Taiwan Ratings' opinion of a company's overall capacity to pay its obligations (that is, its fundamental creditworthiness). This opinion focuses on the obligor's ability and willingness to meet its financial commitments on a timely basis, and it generally indicates the likelihood of default regarding all financial obligations of the firm. It is not necessary for a company to have rated debt in order to be assigned an issuer credit rating.

Although a company's senior secured debt (particularly debt with strong covenants) may occasionally be rated higher than the issuer credit rating on the company, specific issues are typically rated as high as or lower than the issuer rating, depending on their relative priority within the company's debt structure. If they are lower rated entities, issuer credit ratings are generally two notches higher than subordinated debt ratings. Otherwise, they are generally one notch higher. Therefore, though a 'twBB+' issuer credit rating is generally paired with a 'twBB-' subordinated debt rating, a 'twAA' issuer credit rating usually corresponds to a 'twAA-' subordinated rating

Standard & Poor's ongoing enhancement of the CreditPro? database used to generate this study may lead to outcomes that differ to some degree from those reported in previous studies. However, this poses no continuity problem because each study reports statistics back to Dec. 31, 1998. Therefore, each annual default study is self-contained and effectively supersedes all previous versions.

Issuers included in this study

The study analyzed the rating histories of 215 companies that were rated by Taiwan Ratings as of Dec. 31, 1998, or that were first rated between that date and Dec. 31, 2007. These include industrials, utilities, insurance companies, financial holding companies, banks, securities firms, and other financial institutions in Taiwan with long-term credit ratings. The global data presented in this report refers to Standard & Poor's ratings histories of all 13,162 long-term rated issuers from Dec. 31, 1980 to Dec. 31, 2007. The Asia ex-Japan data refers to Standard & Poor's ratings histories of 644 long-term rated issuers from Dec. 31, 1992 to Dec. 31, 2007. The study includes nonconfidentially and confidentially-rated entities as well as those whose ratings that were withdrawn after initial assignment. The analysis excludes public information (pi) ratings and ratings based on the guarantee of another company. Structured finance vehicles, public-sector issuers, and sovereign issuers are the subject of separate default and transition studies and are excluded from this study.

Subsidiaries whose debt is fully guaranteed by a parent or whose default risk is considered identical to that of their parents were excluded. The latter are companies whose obligations are not legally guaranteed by a parent but whose operating or financing activities are so inextricably entwined with those of the parent that it would be impossible to imagine the default of one and not the other. At times, however, some of these subsidiaries might not yet have been covered by a parent's guarantee, or the relationship that combines the default risk of parent and child might have come to an end, or might not have begun. Such subsidiaries were included for the period during which they carried a distinct and separate risk of default.

Definition of default

A default is recorded on the first occurrence of a payment default on any financial obligation, rated or unrated, other than a financial obligation subject to a bona fide commercial dispute; an exception occurs when an interest payment missed on the due date is made within the grace period. Preferred stock is not considered a financial obligation; thus, a missed preferred stock dividend is not normally equated with default. However, we consider distressed exchanges as defaults whenever the debt holders are coerced into accepting substitute instruments with lower coupons, longer maturities, or any other diminished financial terms.

Issue ratings are usually lowered to 'D' following a company's default on the corresponding obligation. In addition, 'SD' is used whenever Taiwan Ratings believes that an obligor that has selectively defaulted on a specific issue or class of obligations will continue to meet its payment obligations on other issues or classes of obligations in a timely matter. 'twR' indicates that an obligor is under regulatory supervision owing to its financial condition. This does not necessarily indicate a default event, but the regulator may have the power to favor one class of obligations over others or pay some obligations and not others. 'D', 'SD', and 'twR' issuer ratings are deemed defaults for purposes of this study. A default is assumed to take place on the earliest of: the date Taiwan Ratings revised the ratings to D', 'SD', or 'twR'; the date a debt payment was missed; the date a distressed exchange offer was announced; or the date the debtor filed for or was forced into bankruptcy.

Static pool methodology

Taiwan Ratings conducts its default studies on the basis of groupings called static pools. Static pools are formed by grouping issuers by rating category at the beginning of each year covered by the study. Each static pool is followed from that point forward. All companies included in the study are assigned to one or more static pools. When an issuer defaults, that default is assigned back to all of the static pools to which the issuer belonged.

Taiwan Ratings uses the static pool methodology to avoid certain pitfalls in estimating default rates, to ensure that default rates account for rating migration, and to allow default rates to be calculated across multi-period time horizons. Some methods for calculating default and rating transition rates might charge defaults against only the initial rating on the issuer--ignoring more recent rating changes that supply more current information. Other methods may calculate default rates using only the most recent year's default and rating data--this method may yield comparatively low default rates during periods of high rating activity, as they ignore prior years' default activity.

The pools are static in the sense that their membership remains constant over time. Each static pool can be interpreted as a buy and hold portfolio. Because errors, if any, are corrected by every new update, and because the criteria for inclusion or exclusion of companies in the default study are subject to minor revisions as time goes by, it is not possible to compare static pools across different studies. Therefore, every new update revises results back to the same starting date of Dec. 31, 1998, to avoid continuity problems.

Entities that have had ratings withdrawn--that is, revised to N.R.--are surveilled with the aim of capturing a potential default. These companies, as well as those that have defaulted, are excluded from subsequent static pools.

For instance, the 1999 static pool consists of all companies rated as of 12:01 a.m. Jan. 1, 1999. Adding those companies first rated in 1999 to the surviving members of the 1999 static pool forms the 2000 static pool. All rating changes that took place are reflected in the newly formed 2000 static pool. This same method was used to form static pools for 2001 through 2007.

Consider the following example: An issuer is originally rated 'twBB' in mid-1998 and is downgraded to 'twB' in 2000. This is followed by a rating withdrawal (N.R.) in 2002 and a default ('D') in 2005. This hypothetical company would be included in the 1999 and 2000 pools with the 'twBB' rating, which it was rated at at the beginning of those years; likewise, it would be included in the 2001 and 2002 pools with the 'twB' rating. It would not be part of the 1998 pool because it was not rated as of the first day of that year, and it would not be included in any pool after the last day of 2002 because the rating had been withdrawn by then. Yet each of the four pools in which this company was included (1999-2002) would record its 2005 default at the appropriate time horizon.

Ratings are withdrawn when an entity's entire debt is paid off or when the program or programs rated are terminated and the relevant debt extinguished. They may also occur as a result of mergers and acquisitions. Others are withdrawn because of a lack of cooperation, particularly when a company is experiencing financial difficulties and refuses to provide all the information needed to continue surveillance on the ratings.

Default rate calculation

Annual default rates were calculated for each static pool: first in units, and later as percentages with respect to the number of issuers in each rating category. Finally, these percentages were combined to obtain cumulative default rates for the ten years covered by the study.

Issuer-weighted default rates

Averages that appear in this study are calculated based on the number of issuers rather than the dollar amounts affected by defaults or rating changes. Although dollar amounts provide information about the portion of the market that is affected by defaults or rating changes, issuer-weighted averages are a more useful measure of the statistical performance of ratings.

Many practitioners use statistics from this default study and CreditPro? to estimate the probability of default and the probability of rating transition. It is important to note that we do not imply a specific probability of default; however, our historical default rates are frequently used to estimate these characteristics. When estimating the probability of default, issuer-weighted statistics have less variance than dollar-weighted statistics and are therefore preferable.

Cumulative average default rate calculation

Cumulative default rates that average the experience of all static pools were derived by calculating marginal default rates, conditional on survival (survivors being nondefaulters) for each possible time horizon and for each static pool, weight averaging the conditional marginal default rates, and accumulating the average conditional marginal default rates. Conditional default rates are calculated by dividing the number of issuers in a static pool that default at a specific time horizon by the number of issuers that survived (did not default) to that point in time. Weights are based on the number of issuers in each static pool. Cumulative default rates are one minus the product of the proportion of survivors (nondefaulters).

N.R.-removed default rates

A slightly different method is used to obtain N.R.-removed default rates. These are obtained by omitting those issuers that had ratings withdrawn. The N.R.-removal replicates the default rate that a buy-and-hold portfolio would experience if the portfolio were reallocated among the non-N.R. members of the portfolio each time the rating on a company is withdrawn. The numerators and denominators of the default rates decrease gradually as companies merge, leave the public fixed-income markets, or request the ratings on them be withdrawn. These rates are, in general, greater than those of the conventional default rate calculation, but the overall behavior of the default rates is quite similar. That is, the higher the rating, the lower the default likelihood.

The N.R.-removed default rate calculation may unduly inflate default rates as shown by the following example. Suppose that there were 10 issuers in a static pool, nine of which became N.R. over a 10-year time span for benign reasons such as mergers or retiring of debt. If, in the 10th year, the one company that was still rated was to default, the N.R.-adjusted default rate would be 100% for the 10-year time horizon. For the conventional default rate to reach 100%, all nine of the N.R. issuers would need to default after the ratings on them were withdrawn. Although the N.R.-removed default rate likely overstates the risk of default, it is included in this study because some investors use it as a conservative estimate of average default rates.

Time sample

This update limits the reporting of default rates to the selected time horizon; however, the data was gathered for ten years and all calculations are based on the rating experience of that period. The maturities of most obligations are much shorter than the selected time horizon. In addition, average default statistics become less reliable at longer time horizons as the sample size becomes smaller and the cyclical nature of default rates increases its effect on averages.

Default patterns share broad similarities across all static pools, suggesting that Taiwan Ratings' rating standards have been consistent over time. Adverse business conditions tend to coincide with default upswings for all pools. Speculative-grade issuers have been hit the hardest by these upswings, but investment-grade default rates also increase in stressful periods.

Transition analysis

Transition rates compare issuer ratings at the beginning of a time period with ratings at the end of the period. To compute one-year rating transition rates by rating category, the rating on each entity at the end of a particular year was compared with the rating at the beginning of the same year. An issuer that remained rated for more than one year was counted as many times as the number of years it was rated. For instance, an issuer continually rated from the middle of 1998 to the middle of 2003 would appear in the four consecutive one-year transition matrices from 1999 to 2002. All 1999 static pool members still rated on Dec. 31, 2007, had 9 one-year transitions, while companies first rated between Jan. 1, 2007, and Dec. 31, 2007 had only one.

Each one-year transition matrix displays all rating movements between letter categories from the beginning of the year through year-end. For each rating listed in the matrix's left-most column, there are nine ratios listed in the rows, corresponding to the ratings from 'twAAA' to 'D,' plus an entry for N.R.

Practical application of transition rates

Rating transition rates are useful to investors and credit professionals for whom rating stability is important. For instance, investors restricted by law or inclination to invest in top-grade bonds would want to assess the likelihood that Taiwan Ratings' analysts will continue to assign top ratings to their investments. Conversely, investors buying high-yield bonds in hopes of profiting from a rating upgrade would be able to gauge that expectation realistically.

The credit community might also use rating transition information, in part, to determine maturity exposure limits or to measure credit risk in the context of the value-at-risk models. Assuming that the rating transition rates are stable and follow a first-order Markov process, cumulative default rates could be projected for any number of years into the future. Rating transition matrices could also be constructed to produce stressed default rates. Such matrices are often used in the area of credit risk measurement. In addition, multiyear transition matrices are valuable tools that can be used to forecast future rating distributions and may be better suited for certain applications than are one-year transition matrices.

N.R.-removed transition rates

The difference between a N.R.-removed table and one that is not is that the former is based on pools that have been gradually pared down by dropping those obligors whose ratings have been withdrawn (set to 'N.R.'). The number of withdrawn ratings grows particularly large in the case of speculative-grade ratings categories after just a few years. Little is known about 'N.R.' obligors except that there is no public record of a default. Indeed, default might be unlikely for those obligors whose debt has been extinguished.

Comparing transition rates with default rates

Rating transition rates may be compared with the marginal and cumulative default rates described in the previous section. For example, note that the one-year default rate column of table 2 is equivalent to column 'D' of the average one-year transition matrix found in table 5. Cumulative average default rates are the summary of all static pools from 1998 through 2007 while the number of pools used in the average transition rate is limited by the transition's time horizon.