| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5091557 | Journal of Banking & Finance | 2006 | 23 Pages | 
Abstract
												We study the economic benefits from using credit scoring models. We contribute to the literature by relating the discriminatory power of a credit scoring model to the optimal credit decision. Given the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, we derive (a) the profit-maximizing cutoff and (b) the pricing curve. Using these two concepts and a mixture thereof, we study a stylized loan market model with banks differing in the quality of their credit scoring model. Even for small quality differences, the variation in profitability among lenders is large and economically significant. We end our analysis by quantifying the impact on profits when information leaks from a competitor's scoring model into the market.
Keywords
												
											Related Topics
												
													Social Sciences and Humanities
													Economics, Econometrics and Finance
													Economics and Econometrics
												
											Authors
												Andreas Blöchlinger, Markus Leippold, 
											