2016
DOI: 10.1007/s40685-016-0028-5
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The recovery rate for retail and commercial customers in Germany: a look at collateral and its adjusted market values

Abstract: Based on a unique data set of 909 defaulted retail and commercial (selfemployed and SMEs) credit customers in Germany, whose original loans were made by 123 different banks, our article confirms a significant positive influence of collateral, and of amicable agreements between the debtor and the bank (redemption), on the recovery rate [1 -loss given default (LGD)]. In a further analysis of collateral, systematic biases between the realized market price and the expected market values of real estate are revealed… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…In a booming market with prices increases of 10% or more, the property sold will fetch the going market price. The calibration matches the empirical observation of 78% for the average recovery value of defaulted German properties, as reported by Ingermann et al (2016).…”
Section: Measuring Households' Solvency Risksupporting
confidence: 84%
“…In a booming market with prices increases of 10% or more, the property sold will fetch the going market price. The calibration matches the empirical observation of 78% for the average recovery value of defaulted German properties, as reported by Ingermann et al (2016).…”
Section: Measuring Households' Solvency Risksupporting
confidence: 84%
“…with ∆p i,t = p i,t p i,t−1 − 1 and a natural lower bound at zero and a maximum discount rate of 50% in the most adverse possible market environment. The implied value of 25% for the years 2006-2011, when average house price were flat in Germany, corresponds well with the average recovery values of 78% reported by Ingermann et al (2016) for a portfolio of 1,236 defaulted German properties for the same time period. Finally, the time-invariant annual depreciation rate δ is set to be 1.5%.…”
Section: Data and Model Calibrationsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Bellotti & Crook () report adjusted values between 10.5% and 11.1% in a linear regression on a comprehensive set of debtor, contract, spatial, and macroeconomic characteristics; Gürtler & Hibbeln () report values between 4.4% and 18.9%; Loterman, Brown, Martens, Mues, and Baesens () examine six different loan data sets and find R2 values between 1.2% and 44.12%. The R2 value is considerably higher in studies that include information on collateral—up to 76.9% for Ingermann et al () or up to 61% for Qi & Yang (). Given that the values not including collateral are often low, predicting the recovery rate is considered a difficult problem.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Our empirical modeling analysis uses the fractional regression model of Papke & Wooldridge (), a common approach in modeling the recovery rate of bank loans (Dermine & de Carvalho, ; Ingermann, Hesse, Bélorgey, & Pfingsten, ). Furthermore, Beck et al () use this approach to model collection rates.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%