Stock& Watson 207.2

orit

Active Member
Hi David,
Can you please clarify a point regarding this question:
If the true probability of default is 1%, the entire sample default is n*p it means that since the bonds defaults are i.i.d the average default rate increases when the sample size n increases.
In this question the default rate is given by D/N, can you please explain?

Thanks,
Orit
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
Hi Orit,

This is the Law of Large Numbers. The true probability is the population average (mu); i.e., each bond defaults with probability of 1%.
If there are 100 bonds, we expect 1 default (1%), but there might occur zero (0%) or 2 or even 3; if 3 defaults occur, D =3, N = 100, and default rate = 3%.
As N increases, the LLN says that conditional on i.i.d., the default rate (D/N) will approach (converge on) the "true" 1.0%. So, the number of defaults will increase (i.e., the expected value of n*p increases with n) but the default RATE tends toward 1.0%. Please note:
  • Expected number of defaults = N*p; Expected default rate = (N*p/N) = p; this are ex ante as (p) is a population probability
  • Actual realized (ex post) number defaults = D; LLN says D/N --> p, as N increases, if i.i.d.
 
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