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Auteurs principaux: Hurlin, Christophe, Lajaunie, Quentin, Pull, Yoann
Format: Preprint
Publié: 2026
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Accès en ligne:https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.03983
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author Hurlin, Christophe
Lajaunie, Quentin
Pull, Yoann
author_facet Hurlin, Christophe
Lajaunie, Quentin
Pull, Yoann
contents This paper proposes a formal framework for reverse stress testing geopolitical risk in corporate credit portfolios. A joint macro-financial scenario vector, augmented with an explicit geopolitical risk factor, is mapped into stressed probabilities of default and losses given default. These stresses are then propagated to portfolio tail losses through a latent factor structure and translated into a stressed CET1 ratio, jointly accounting for capital depletion and risk-weighted asset dynamics. Reverse stress testing is formulated as a constrained maximum likelihood problem over the scenario space. This yields a geopolitical point reverse stress test, or design point, defined as the most probable scenario that breaches a prescribed capital adequacy constraint under a reference distribution. The framework further characterises neighbourhoods and near optimal sets of reverse stress scenarios, allowing for sensitivity analysis and governance oriented interpretation. The approach is compatible with internal rating based models and supports implementation at the exposure or sector level.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2601_03983
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Reverse Stress Testing Geopolitical Risk in Corporate Credit Portfolios: A Formal and Operational Framework
Hurlin, Christophe
Lajaunie, Quentin
Pull, Yoann
Econometrics
This paper proposes a formal framework for reverse stress testing geopolitical risk in corporate credit portfolios. A joint macro-financial scenario vector, augmented with an explicit geopolitical risk factor, is mapped into stressed probabilities of default and losses given default. These stresses are then propagated to portfolio tail losses through a latent factor structure and translated into a stressed CET1 ratio, jointly accounting for capital depletion and risk-weighted asset dynamics. Reverse stress testing is formulated as a constrained maximum likelihood problem over the scenario space. This yields a geopolitical point reverse stress test, or design point, defined as the most probable scenario that breaches a prescribed capital adequacy constraint under a reference distribution. The framework further characterises neighbourhoods and near optimal sets of reverse stress scenarios, allowing for sensitivity analysis and governance oriented interpretation. The approach is compatible with internal rating based models and supports implementation at the exposure or sector level.
title Reverse Stress Testing Geopolitical Risk in Corporate Credit Portfolios: A Formal and Operational Framework
topic Econometrics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2601.03983