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P2P Loan acceptance and default prediction with Artificial Intelligence

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  • Jeremy D. Turiel
  • Tomaso Aste

Abstract

Logistic Regression and Support Vector Machine algorithms, together with Linear and Non-Linear Deep Neural Networks, are applied to lending data in order to replicate lender acceptance of loans and predict the likelihood of default of issued loans. A two phase model is proposed; the first phase predicts loan rejection, while the second one predicts default risk for approved loans. Logistic Regression was found to be the best performer for the first phase, with test set recall macro score of $77.4 \%$. Deep Neural Networks were applied to the second phase only, were they achieved best performance, with validation set recall score of $72 \%$, for defaults. This shows that AI can improve current credit risk models reducing the default risk of issued loans by as much as $70 \%$. The models were also applied to loans taken for small businesses alone. The first phase of the model performs significantly better when trained on the whole dataset. Instead, the second phase performs significantly better when trained on the small business subset. This suggests a potential discrepancy between how these loans are screened and how they should be analysed in terms of default prediction.

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  • Jeremy D. Turiel & Tomaso Aste, 2019. "P2P Loan acceptance and default prediction with Artificial Intelligence," Papers 1907.01800, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1907.01800
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    Cited by:

    1. Revathi Bhuvaneswari & Antonio Segalini, 2020. "Determining Secondary Attributes for Credit Evaluation in P2P Lending," Papers 2006.13921, arXiv.org.
    2. Andrés Alonso & José Manuel Carbó, 2021. "Understanding the performance of machine learning models to predict credit default: a novel approach for supervisory evaluation," Working Papers 2105, Banco de España.
    3. Alonso-Robisco, Andrés & Carbó, José Manuel, 2022. "Can machine learning models save capital for banks? Evidence from a Spanish credit portfolio," International Review of Financial Analysis, Elsevier, vol. 84(C).
    4. Štefan Lyócsa & Petra Vašaničová & Branka Hadji Misheva & Marko Dávid Vateha, 2022. "Default or profit scoring credit systems? Evidence from European and US peer-to-peer lending markets," Financial Innovation, Springer;Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, vol. 8(1), pages 1-21, December.
    5. Andrés Alonso Robisco & José Manuel Carbó Martínez, 2022. "Measuring the model risk-adjusted performance of machine learning algorithms in credit default prediction," Financial Innovation, Springer;Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, vol. 8(1), pages 1-35, December.
    6. Luisa Roa & Andr'es Rodr'iguez-Rey & Alejandro Correa-Bahnsen & Carlos Valencia, 2021. "Supporting Financial Inclusion with Graph Machine Learning and Super-App Alternative Data," Papers 2102.09974, arXiv.org.

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