Artículo de revista
Development and application of consumer credit scoring models using profit-based classification measures
Fecha
2014Registro en:
European Journal of Operational Research 238 (2014) 505–513
DOI: doi.org/10.1016/j.ejor.2014.04.001
Autor
Verbraken, Thomas
Bravo, Christian
Weber, Richard
Baesens, Bart
Institución
Resumen
This paper presents a new approach for consumer credit scoring, by tailoring a profit-based classification
performance measure to credit risk modeling. This performance measure takes into account the expected
profits and losses of credit granting and thereby better aligns the model developers’ objectives with those
of the lending company. It is based on the Expected Maximum Profit (EMP) measure and is used to find a
trade-off between the expected losses – driven by the exposure of the loan and the loss given default –
and the operational income given by the loan. Additionally, one of the major advantages of using the
proposed measure is that it permits to calculate the optimal cutoff value, which is necessary for model
implementation. To test the proposed approach, we use a dataset of loans granted by a government institution,
and benchmarked the accuracy and monetary gain of using EMP, accuracy, and the area under the
ROC curve as measures for selecting model parameters, and for determining the respective cutoff values.
The results show that our proposed profit-based classification measure outperforms the alternative
approaches in terms of both accuracy and monetary value in the test set, and that it facilitates model
deployment.