Predicting Firm Financial Distress: A Mixed Logit Model

Author:

Jones Stewart1,Hensher David A.1

Affiliation:

1. The University of Sydney.

Abstract

Over the past three decades the literature on financial distress prediction has largely been confined to simple multiple discriminant analysis, binary logistic or probit analysis, or rudimentary multinomial logit models (MNL). There has been a conspicuous absence of modeling innovation in this literature as well as a failure to keep abreast of important methodological developments emerging in other fields of the social sciences. In particular, there has been no recognition of major advances in discrete choice modeling over the last 15 years, which has increasingly relaxed behaviorally questionable assumptions associated with the independently and identically distributed errors (IID) condition and allowed for observed and unobserved heterogeneity. In contrast to standard logit, the mixed logit model fulfils this purpose and provides a superior framework for explanation and prediction. We explain the theoretical and econometric underpinnings of mixed logit and demonstrate its empirical usefulness in the context of a specific but topical area of accounting research: financial distress prediction. Comparisons of model-fits and out-of-sample forecasts indicate that mixed logit outperforms standard logit by significant margins. While mixed logit has valuable applications in financial distress research, its potential usefulness in other areas of accounting research should not be overlooked.

Publisher

American Accounting Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting

Reference13 articles.

1. - 2001. Bankruptcy, Credit Risk and High Yield Junk Bonds. New York, NY: Blackwell Publishers.

2. Australian Accounting Standards Board (AASB). 1992. Approved Australian Accounting Standard AASB 1026: Statement of Cash Flows. Melbourne, Australia: Australian Accounting Research Foundation.

3. Australian Corporations Act 2001. Available at: http: / / www.austlii.edu.au / au / legis / cth / consol act / ca2001172.

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