This package is intended to serve as a set of tools to help convert credit risk data at two timepoints into traditional state transition matrices. At a higher level, {migrate} is intended to help an analyst understand how risk moved in their credit portfolio over a time interval.
One of the more difficult aspects of making a state migration matrix in R (or Python, for that matter) is the fact that the output doesn’t satisfy the structure of a traditional data frame object. Rather, the output needs to be a matrix, which is a data structure that R does support. In the past, there has been difficulty converting a matrix to something more visual-friendly. More recently, however, tools like the kableExtra and gt packages allow us to present visually appealing output that extends the structure of a data frame. Using the matrix-style output of {migrate}’s functions with a visual formatting package such as the two mentioned above will hopefully help analysts streamline the presentation of their credit portfolio’s state migration matrices to an audience.
If you haven’t done so already, first install {migrate} with the instructions in the README section.
First, load the package using library()
The package has a built-in mock dataset, which can be loaded into the environment like so:
customer_id | date | risk_rating | principal_balance |
---|---|---|---|
Customer_1001 | 2020-06-30 | A | 915000 |
Customer_1001 | 2020-09-30 | A | 1328000 |
Customer_1002 | 2020-06-30 | AAA | 979000 |
Customer_1002 | 2020-09-30 | AAA | 354000 |
Customer_1003 | 2020-06-30 | BBB | 1400000 |
Customer_1003 | 2020-09-30 | BBB | 356000 |
Note that an important feature of the mock_credit
dataset is that there are exactly two (2) unique values in the
date
column variable; if the time
argument
passed to migrate()
has more than two (2) unique values,
the function will throw an error.
To summarize the migration within the data, use the
migrate()
function
migrated_df <- migrate(
data = mock_credit,
id = customer_id,
time = date,
state = risk_rating,
)
#> ℹ Migrating from 2020-06-30 to 2020-09-30
head(migrated_df)
#> # A tibble: 6 × 3
#> risk_rating_start risk_rating_end prop
#> <ord> <ord> <dbl>
#> 1 AAA AAA 0.774
#> 2 AAA AA 0.194
#> 3 AAA A 0.0323
#> 4 AAA BBB 0
#> 5 AAA BB 0
#> 6 AAA B 0
To create the state transition matrix, use the
build_matrix()
function
build_matrix(migrated_df)
#> ℹ Using `risk_rating_start` as the 'state_start' column variable
#> ℹ Using `risk_rating_end` as the 'state_end' column variable
#> ℹ Using `prop` as the 'metric' column variable
#> AAA AA A BBB BB B CCC
#> AAA 0.774193548 0.19354839 0.03225806 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.00000000
#> AA 0.101123596 0.66292135 0.15730337 0.07865169 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.00000000
#> A 0.008333333 0.06666667 0.72500000 0.16666667 0.03333333 0.00000000 0.00000000
#> BBB 0.000000000 0.00000000 0.11363636 0.68181818 0.14772727 0.05681818 0.00000000
#> BB 0.000000000 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.11392405 0.63291139 0.16455696 0.08860759
#> B 0.000000000 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.01388889 0.09722222 0.62500000 0.26388889
#> CCC 0.000000000 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.00000000 0.14285714 0.85714286
Or, to do it all in one shot, use the |>
mock_credit |>
migrate(
id = customer_id,
time = date,
state = risk_rating,
metric = principal_balance,
percent = FALSE,
verbose = FALSE
) |>
build_matrix(
state_start = risk_rating_start,
state_end = risk_rating_end,
metric = principal_balance
)
#> AAA AA A BBB BB B CCC
#> AAA 29042000 6575000 20000 0 0 0 0
#> AA 6445000 58095000 13045000 14467000 0 0 0
#> A 804000 7898000 85330000 21015000 5829000 0 0
#> BBB 0 0 12461000 65315000 13911000 8140000 0
#> BB 0 0 0 11374000 45986000 14057000 5723000
#> B 0 0 0 413000 6700000 47402000 17132000
#> CCC 0 0 0 0 0 2094000 14843000
The following code creates a dataframe that features 500 customers with the following characteristics:
mock_credit_with_missing <- mock_credit |>
# Remove the value at the first timepoint for 10 customers
dplyr::slice(-(1:10)) |>
# Remove the value at the last timepoint for 20 customers
dplyr::slice(-((dplyr::n() - 19):dplyr::n()))
Check that the new dataframe has information about 500 customers:
# Number of unique customer_id values in mock_credit_with_missing
dplyr::n_distinct(mock_credit_with_missing$customer_id)
#> [1] 500
By default, migrate()
drops observations that belong to
IDs found at a single timepoint. migrate()
informs such
behavior through a warning:
migrated_data_without_fill_state <- mock_credit_with_missing |>
migrate(
id = customer_id,
time = date,
state = risk_rating,
percent = FALSE,
verbose = FALSE
)
#> Warning: ! Removed 30 observations due to missingness or IDs only existing at one `time` value
Notice that only 470 customers have been migrated:
You can use migrate()
’s fill_state
argument
to ensure that no information is lost during the migration process. When
a filler state value (e.g., a character string such as “No
Rating” or “NR”) is assigned to fill_state
, IDs with a
single timepoint are not removed but rather migrated from or to this
filler state.
When verbose = TRUE
a message will provide additional
information about the IDs with missing timepoints:
migrated_data_with_fill_state <- mock_credit_with_missing |>
migrate(
id = customer_id,
time = date,
state = risk_rating,
fill_state = "No Rating",
percent = FALSE,
verbose = TRUE
)
#> ℹ Migrating from 2020-06-30 to 2020-09-30
#> ℹ 30 IDs have a missing timepoint:
#> • Migrating 20 IDs with missing end timepoint to new class 'No Rating'
#> • Migrating 10 IDs with missing start timepoint from new class 'No Rating'
Check that 500 customers were migrated:
So far we have been using count
as the metric to easily
determine the amount of customers that migrated in each scenario. The
following code provides an example migration that leverages
principal_balance
as the metric:
mock_credit_with_missing |>
migrate(
id = customer_id,
time = date,
state = risk_rating,
metric = principal_balance,
fill_state = "No Rating",
percent = FALSE,
verbose = FALSE
) |>
build_matrix(
state_start = risk_rating_start,
state_end = risk_rating_end,
metric = principal_balance
)
#> AAA AA A BBB BB B CCC No Rating
#> AAA 27403000 4301000 20000 0 0 0 0 2274000
#> AA 6445000 56333000 11642000 14467000 0 0 0 1762000
#> A 804000 7682000 82044000 19823000 5829000 0 0 3779000
#> BBB 0 0 12461000 62071000 11480000 8140000 0 4275000
#> BB 0 0 0 10930000 44487000 11838000 5723000 1995000
#> B 0 0 0 0 6700000 46412000 14977000 3210000
#> CCC 0 0 0 0 0 2094000 14447000 0
#> No Rating 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0