A recent IMF report has highlighted a surge in instability within nonfinancial corporations. As the potential for mass economic failure mounts, CreditRiskMonitor is providing the daily markers that effectively signal on the counterparties in your portfolio that hold the most extreme bankruptcy risk potential.
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With summer at an end, 2020 has already been an extreme year for financial risk analysis, with more to come as international public companies approach Q4 in tenuous positions.
Here are some high-profile public companies that risk professionals must monitor closely as we reach 2021's midpoint. Credit risk may have receded some in recent months, but the spectres of debt and potential bankruptcy loom larger than ever.
The FRISK® score highlights the most critical public company risks in your portfolio as soon as possible so you can spend time on the relationships that need the most attention.
As the world grapples with a new surge of COVID-19 infections, it is worth revisiting Hertz Global Holdings’ bankruptcy and what their tribulation should teach you about other distressed travel names in your portfolio.
As the coronavirus (COVID-19) sends shockwaves through the stock market and the world at large, it has also greatly upped the financial risk potential for automotive, technology, healthcare, chemicals, and many other industries.
From the start of the coronavirus pandemic, CreditRiskMonitor subscribers have experienced an increase in public company FRISK® scored corporate failures* throughout North America.
Unless there is a rapid economic recovery, more retailers are going to go the way of J. C. Penney, Pier 1 Imports, Neiman Marcus and J.Crew. That is: bankruptcy.
The coronavirus has reduced air travel across key channels worldwide. Equity markets are souring on airliners, especially those that already carry excessive debt and are strapped for cash.