Credit Analysis

Credit Analysis

Credit analysis is a type of financial analysis that an investor or bond portfolio manager performs on companies, governments, municipalities, or any other debt-issuing entities to measure the issuer's ability to meet its debt obligations. Credit analysis is a type of financial analysis that an investor or bond portfolio manager performs on companies, governments, municipalities, or any other debt-issuing entities to measure the issuer's ability to meet its debt obligations. If the manager believes that the company's debt rating is about to improve, which is a signal of relatively lower default risk, then the manager can purchase the bond before the rating change takes place, and then sell the bond after the change in rating at a higher price. To judge a company’s ability to pay its debt, banks, bond investors, and analysts conduct credit analysis on the company. The outcome of the credit analysis will determine what risk rating to assign the debt issuer or borrower.

Credit analysis evaluates the riskiness of debt instruments issued by companies or entities to measure the entity's ability to meet its obligations.

What Is Credit Analysis?

Credit analysis is a type of financial analysis that an investor or bond portfolio manager performs on companies, governments, municipalities, or any other debt-issuing entities to measure the issuer's ability to meet its debt obligations. Credit analysis seeks to identify the appropriate level of default risk associated with investing in that particular entity's debt instruments.

Credit analysis evaluates the riskiness of debt instruments issued by companies or entities to measure the entity's ability to meet its obligations.
The credit analysis seeks to identify the appropriate level of default risk associated with investing in that particular entity.
The outcome of the credit analysis will determine what risk rating to assign the debt issuer or borrower.

How Credit Analysis Works

To judge a company’s ability to pay its debt, banks, bond investors, and analysts conduct credit analysis on the company. Using financial ratios, cash flow analysis, trend analysis, and financial projections, an analyst can evaluate a firm’s ability to pay its obligations. A review of credit scores and any collateral is also used to calculate the creditworthiness of a business.

Not only is the credit analysis used to predict the probability of a borrower defaulting on its debt, but it's also used to assess how severe the losses will be in the event of default.

The outcome of the credit analysis will determine what risk rating to assign the debt issuer or borrower. The risk rating, in turn, determines whether to extend credit or loan money to the borrowing entity and, if so, the amount to lend.

Credit Analysis Example

An example of a financial ratio used in credit analysis is the debt service coverage ratio (DSCR). The DSCR is a measure of the level of cash flow available to pay current debt obligations, such as interest, principal, and lease payments. A debt service coverage ratio below 1 indicates a negative cash flow.

For example, a debt service coverage ratio of 0.89 indicates that the company’s net operating income is enough to cover only 89% of its annual debt payments. In addition to fundamental factors used in credit analysis, environmental factors such as regulatory climate, competition, taxation, and globalization can also be used in combination with the fundamentals to reflect a borrower's ability to repay its debts relative to other borrowers in its industry.

Special Considerations

Credit analysis is also used to estimate whether the credit rating of a bond issuer is about to change. By identifying companies that are about to experience a change in debt rating, an investor or manager can speculate on that change and possibly make a profit.

For example, assume a manager is considering buying junk bonds in a company. If the manager believes that the company's debt rating is about to improve, which is a signal of relatively lower default risk, then the manager can purchase the bond before the rating change takes place, and then sell the bond after the change in rating at a higher price. On the other side, an equity investor can buy the stock since the bond rating change might have a positive impact on the stock price.

Related terms:

Accounting

Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more

Cash Available for Debt Service (CADS)

Cash available for debt service (CADS) is a ratio that measures the amount of cash a company has on hand to pay obligations due within a year. read more

Credit Rating

A credit rating is an assessment of the creditworthiness of a borrower—in general terms or with respect to a particular debt or financial obligation. read more

Debt Issue

A debt issue is a financial obligation that allows the issuer to raise funds by promising to repay the lender at a certain point in the future. read more

Debt Limitation

Debt limitation is a bond covenant that seeks to protect current lenders by restricting the amount of additional debt that the issuer might incur. read more

Default Risk

Default risk is the event in which companies or individuals will be unable to make the required payments on their debt obligations. read more

Debt-Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR)

In corporate finance, the debt-service coverage ratio (DSCR) is a measurement of the cash flow available to pay current debt obligations. read more

Junk Bond

Junk bonds are debt securities rated poorly by credit agencies, making them higher risk (and higher yielding) than investment grade debt. read more

Leased Bank Guarantee

A leased bank guarantee is a bank guarantee that is leased to a third party for a specific fee, which tends to be high.  read more

Solvency Ratio

A solvency ratio is a key metric used to measure an enterprise’s ability to meet its debt and other obligations. read more