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Predicting bankruptcies the Prof Altman way

In India, the Z-score model was used to identify possible bankruptcy for at least 10 companies two years before the crisis finally hit home. 

February 15, 2019 / 09:26 IST
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RN Bhaskar

Meeting Prof Edward Altman was like a pilgrimage. For 25 years, I have looked at the Altman Z-score model with reverence. I became more familiar with the model when tweaking it and redesigning it with the help of two extremely bright Wharton graduates -- Chetan and Vinay Parikh -- in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

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The model we had then developed was intended to do predict excellence in each industry (because each industry has a different set of dynamics under which it operates). It was quite the opposite of what the Z-score does which is to predict bankruptcy.

Each week, we used the model to determine the best performer in an industry segment for a large publishing group. We continued this from 1990 to 1998.  Then I decided to leave the group. So did the Wharton geniuses. There was nobody left to understand the multi-variant discriminant analysis model and the exercise was scrapped.