Former Rating Agency Analysts Launch Open Source Government Bond Rating Tool
Public Sector Credit Framework Responds to Market Need for Transparency in Troubled Sectors
NEW YORK, May 2, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Public Sector Credit Solutions and PF2 Securities Evaluations released an open source framework for analyzing and rating sovereign, state and municipal bond issuers.
PF2's Public Sector Credit Framework (PSCF) avoids several of the pitfalls facing traditional public finance methodologies used by credit rating agencies. PSCF's approach is boldly quantitative and consistent. It relies on a multi-year budget simulation that estimates annual default probabilities based on the likelihood of exceeding a user-specified fiscal threshold in any given year. These default probabilities are then converted to ratings.
"Rating agency sovereign and muni bond groups do not take advantage of the power and objectivity of quantitative techniques, leaving their methodologies vulnerable to bias and inconsistency," said PF2 Consultant Marc Joffe, who previously researched and co-authored Kroll Bond Rating Agency's Municipal Bond Default Study. PF2 is an independent consulting firm founded by a group of former Moody's analysts.
Academics have welcomed the new technology. Ronald Lee, Director of the Center on the Economics and Demography of Aging at UC Berkeley, said, "The approach of using stochastic budget projections to estimate government credit risk is a natural and appealing approach to an important problem."
Unlike most rating agency models, PSCF is fully open source. Programmers and analysts can review the tool's source code and adapt it to fit their needs. PF2 has posted the software along with sample models for the US and California at http://www.publicsectorcredit.org/pscf.html and the source code on GitHub, a popular open source repository, at https://github.com/joffemd/pscf.
The California sample provided uses as a default point the ratio of interest and pension expenses to total revenue. Budget projections in this analysis rely on a range of population, economic growth, inflation, interest rate and policy scenarios. While these modeling choices may be appropriate for California, the framework accommodates a wide variety of threshold choices and budget simulation methods.
Public policy experts applauded the open source approach. Anthony Randazzo, Director of Economic Research at The Reason Foundation, commented, "An open source tool like PSCF is a great answer to complaints about rating agency transparency. By linking a government's projected debt burden to its risk, the framework sends the right signal both to bondholders and policymakers."
CONTACT: Marc Joffe, 415-578-0558
SOURCE Public Sector Credit Solutions
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