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Main Authors: Rech, Frederik, Musa, Hussam, Šebeňa, Martin, Tuo, Siele Jean
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.02510
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author Rech, Frederik
Musa, Hussam
Šebeňa, Martin
Tuo, Siele Jean
author_facet Rech, Frederik
Musa, Hussam
Šebeňa, Martin
Tuo, Siele Jean
contents Forecasting corporate financial distress increasingly requires capturing firms' adoption of transformative technologies such as artificial intelligence, yet model performance remains vulnerable to temporal distribution shifts as these technologies diffuse. This study investigates whether firm-level artificial intelligence (AI) adoption proxies improve forecasting performance beyond standard accounting fundamentals. Using a panel of Chinese A-share non-financial firms from 2007 to 2023, we construct AI indicators from textual disclosures and patent data. We benchmark six machine learning classifiers under a strictly chronological design that fixes the final test year and progressively prunes the training history to capture temporal change. Results indicate that AI proxies consistently improve out-of-sample discrimination and reduce Type II errors, with the strongest gains in tree-based ensembles. Predictive performance is non-monotonic in training window length; models trained on recent data outperform those using full history, while single-year training proves unreliable. Explainability analyses reveal financial ratios as primary drivers, with AI adoption signals adding incremental forecasting content whose interpretation as a risk factor varies across training regimes. Our findings establish AI proxies as valuable predictors for distress screening and demonstrate that adaptive, temporally pruned forecasting windows are essential for robust early warning models in rapidly evolving technological and economic environments.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_02510
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Forecasting financial distress in dynamic environments AI adoption signals and temporally pruned training windows
Rech, Frederik
Musa, Hussam
Šebeňa, Martin
Tuo, Siele Jean
General Economics
Economics
Forecasting corporate financial distress increasingly requires capturing firms' adoption of transformative technologies such as artificial intelligence, yet model performance remains vulnerable to temporal distribution shifts as these technologies diffuse. This study investigates whether firm-level artificial intelligence (AI) adoption proxies improve forecasting performance beyond standard accounting fundamentals. Using a panel of Chinese A-share non-financial firms from 2007 to 2023, we construct AI indicators from textual disclosures and patent data. We benchmark six machine learning classifiers under a strictly chronological design that fixes the final test year and progressively prunes the training history to capture temporal change. Results indicate that AI proxies consistently improve out-of-sample discrimination and reduce Type II errors, with the strongest gains in tree-based ensembles. Predictive performance is non-monotonic in training window length; models trained on recent data outperform those using full history, while single-year training proves unreliable. Explainability analyses reveal financial ratios as primary drivers, with AI adoption signals adding incremental forecasting content whose interpretation as a risk factor varies across training regimes. Our findings establish AI proxies as valuable predictors for distress screening and demonstrate that adaptive, temporally pruned forecasting windows are essential for robust early warning models in rapidly evolving technological and economic environments.
title Forecasting financial distress in dynamic environments AI adoption signals and temporally pruned training windows
topic General Economics
Economics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.02510