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Implied Probabilities and Volatility in Credit Risk: A Merton-Based Approach with Binomial Trees

Implied Probabilities and Volatility in Credit Risk: A Merton-Based Approach with Binomial Trees

来源:Arxiv_logoArxiv
英文摘要

We explore credit risk pricing by modeling equity as a call option and debt as the difference between the firm's asset value and a put option, following the structural framework of the Merton model. Our approach proceeds in two stages: first, we calibrate the asset volatility using the Black-Scholes-Merton (BSM) formula; second, we recover implied mean return and probability surfaces under the physical measure. To achieve this, we construct a recombining binomial tree under the real-world (natural) measure, assuming a fixed initial asset value. The volatility input is taken from a specific region of the implied volatility surface - based on moneyness and maturity - which then informs the calibration of drift and probability. A novel mapping is established between risk-neutral and physical parameters, enabling construction of implied surfaces that reflect the market's credit expectations and offer practical tools for stress testing and credit risk analysis.

Jagdish Gnawali、Abootaleb Shirvani、Svetlozar T. Rachev

财政、金融

Jagdish Gnawali,Abootaleb Shirvani,Svetlozar T. Rachev.Implied Probabilities and Volatility in Credit Risk: A Merton-Based Approach with Binomial Trees[EB/OL].(2025-06-14)[2025-07-21].https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.12694.点此复制

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