Machine learning for zombie hunting: predicting distress from firms’ accounts and missing values

Author:

Bargagli-Stoffi Falco J1,Incerti Fabio2,Riccaboni Massimo2ORCID,Rungi Armando2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biostatistics, Harvard University , 677 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115, USA . e-mail: fbargaglistoffi@hsph.harvard.edu

2. Laboratory for the Analysis of Complex Economic Systems, IMT School for Advanced Studies , Piazza San Francesco 19, Lucca 55100, Italy . e-mail: fabio.incerti@imtlucca.it ; massimo.riccaboni@imtlucca.it ; e-mail: armando.rungi@imtlucca.it

Abstract

Abstract In this contribution, we propose machine learning techniques to predict zombie firms. First, we derive the risk of failure by training and testing our algorithms on disclosed financial information and nonrandom missing values of 304,906 firms active in Italy from 2008 to 2017. We then identify the highest financial distress conditional on predictions that lie above a threshold for which a combination of the false positive rate (false prediction of firm failure) and the false negative rate (false prediction of active firms) is minimized. Therefore, we identify zombies as firms that remain in financial distress, i.e., whose forecasts fall into the risk category above the threshold for at least three consecutive years. To this end, we implement a gradient boosting algorithm (XGBoost) that exploits information about missing values. The inclusion of missing values in our prediction model is crucial because patterns of undisclosed accounts are correlated with firm failure. Finally, we show that our preferred machine learning algorithm outperforms (i) proxy models such as Z-scores and the distance-to-default, (ii) traditional econometric methods, and (iii) other widely used machine learning techniques. We provide evidence that zombies are less productive and smaller on average and that they tend to increase in times of crisis. Finally, we argue that our application can help financial institutions and public authorities design evidence-based policies—e.g., optimal bankruptcy laws and information disclosure policies.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,Management of Technology and Innovation

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