An Optimised Greedy-Weighted Ensemble Framework for Financial Loan Default Prediction
This is an incremental improvement for credit risk management in financial institutions, offering a scalable data-driven approach to enhance loan default prediction accuracy and interpretability.
The study tackled loan default prediction in financial datasets with nonlinear relationships and class imbalance by proposing an Optimised Greedy-Weighted Ensemble framework, which improved predictive performance with an AUC of 0.80, macro-average F1-score of 0.73, and default recall of 0.81.
Accurate prediction of loan defaults is a central challenge in credit risk management, particularly in modern financial datasets characterised by nonlinear relationships, class imbalance, and evolving borrower behaviour. Traditional statistical models and static ensemble methods often struggle to maintain reliable performance under such conditions. This study proposes an Optimised Greedy-Weighted Ensemble framework for loan default prediction that dynamically allocates model weights based on empirical predictive performance. The framework integrates multiple machine learning classifiers, with their hyperparameters first optimised using Particle Swarm Optimisation. Model predictions are then combined via a regularised greedy weighting mechanism. At the same time, a neural-network-based meta-learner is employed within stacked-ensemble to capture higher-order relationships among model outputs. Experiments conducted on the Lending Club dataset demonstrate that the proposed framework improves predictive performance compared with individual classifiers. The BlendNet ensemble achieved the strongest results with an AUC of 0.80, a macro-average F1-score of 0.73, and a default recall of 0.81. Calibration analysis further shows that tree-based ensembles such as Extra Trees and Gradient Boosting provide the most reliable probability estimates, while the stacked ensemble offers superior ranking capability. Feature analysis using Recursive Feature Elimination identifies revolving utilisation, annual income, and debt-to-income ratio as the most influential predictors of loan default. These findings demonstrate that performance-driven ensemble weighting can improve both predictive accuracy and interpretability in credit risk modelling. The proposed framework provides a scalable data-driven approach to support institutional credit assessment, risk monitoring, and financial decision-making.