Forthcoming events in this series


Fri, 25 May 2012

14:15 - 15:00
DH 1st floor SR

General theory of geometric Lévy models for dynamic asset pricing

Prof Dorje Brody
(Brunel Univeristy)
Abstract

The geometric Lévy model (GLM) is a natural generalisation of the geometric Brownian motion (GBM) model. The theory of such models simplifies considerably if one takes a pricing kernel approach. In one dimension, once the underlying Lévy process has been specified, the GLM has four parameters: the initial price, the interest rate, the volatility and the risk aversion. The pricing kernel is the product of a discount factor and a risk aversion martingale. For GBM, the risk aversion parameter is the market price of risk. In this talk I show that for a GLM, this interpretation is not valid: the excess rate of return above the interest rate is a nonlinear function of the volatility and the risk aversion such that it is positive, and is increasing with respect to these variables. In the case of foreign exchange, Siegel’s paradox implies that one can construct foreign exchange models for which the excess rate of return is positive for both the exchange rate and the inverse exchange rate. Examples are worked out for a range of Lévy processes. (The talk is based on a recent paper: Brody, Hughston & Mackie, Proceedings of the Royal Society London, to appear in May 2012).  

Fri, 18 May 2012

14:15 - 15:00
DH 1st floor SR

Absence of arbitrage and changes of measure

Prof Martin Schweizer
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract

Absence of arbitrage is a highly desirable feature in mathematical models of financial markets. In its pure form (whether as NFLVR or as the existence of a variant of an equivalent martingale measure R), it is qualitative and therefore robust towards equivalent changes of the underlying reference probability (the "real-world" measure P). But what happens if we look at more quantitative versions of absence of arbitrage, where we impose for instance some integrability on the density dR/dP? To which extent is such a property robust towards changes of P? We discuss these uestions and present some recent results.

The talk is based on joint work with Tahir Choulli (University of Alberta, Edmonton).

Fri, 11 May 2012

12:30 - 15:00
Oxford-Man Institute

Commodity Storage Valuation

Prof Kumar Muthuraman
(University of Texas at Austin)
Abstract

We present a general valuation framework for commodity storage facilities, for non-perishable commodities. Modeling commodity prices with a mean reverting process we provide analytical expressions for the value obtainable from the storage for any admissible injection/withdrawal policy. Then we present an iterative numerical algorithm to find the optimal injection and withdrawal policies, along with the necessary theoretical guarantees for convergence. Together, the analytical expressions and the numerical algorithm present an extremely efficient way of solving not only commodity storage problems but in general the problem of optimally controlling a mean reverting processes with transaction costs.

Fri, 04 May 2012

14:00 - 15:00
DH 1st floor SR

A guide through market viability for frictionless markets

Prof Kostas Kardars 
(Boston University)
Abstract

In this talk, we elaborate on the notions of no-free-lunch that have proved essential in the theory of financial mathematics---most notably, arbitrage of the first kind. Focus will be given in most recent developments. The precise connections with existence of deflators, numeraires and pricing measures are explained, as well as the consequences that these notions have in the existence of bubbles and the valuation of illiquid assets in the market.

Fri, 09 Mar 2012
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

G-Expectation for General Random Variables

Marcel Nutz
(Columbia)
Abstract

We provide a general construction of time-consistent sublinear expectations on the space of continuous paths. In particular, we construct the conditional G-expectation of a Borel-measurable (rather than quasi-continuous) random variable.

Fri, 02 Mar 2012
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Best Gain Loss Ratio in Continuous Time

Sara Biagini
(Unipi)
Abstract

The use of gain-loss ratio as a measure of attractiveness has been

introduced by Bernardo and Ledoit. In their well-known paper, they

show that gain-loss ratio restrictions have a dual representation in

terms of restricted pricing kernels.

In spite of its clear financial significance, gain-loss ratio has

been largely ignored in the mathematical finance literature, with few

exceptions (Cherny and Madan, Pinar). The main reason is intrinsic

lack of good mathematical properties. This paper aims to be a

rigorous study of gain-loss ratio and its dual representations

in a continuous-time market setting, placing it in the context of

risk measures and acceptability indexes. We also point out (and

correctly reformulate) an erroneous statement made by Bernardo and

Ledoit in their main result. This is joint work with M. Pinar.

Fri, 24 Feb 2012
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Comparison between the Mean Variance Optimal and the Mean Quadratic Variation Optimal Trading Strategies

Peter Forsyth
(Waterloo)
Abstract

Algorithmic trade execution has become a standard technique

for institutional market players in recent years,

particularly in the equity market where electronic

trading is most prevalent. A trade execution algorithm

typically seeks to execute a trade decision optimally

upon receiving inputs from a human trader.

A common form of optimality criterion seeks to

strike a balance between minimizing pricing impact and

minimizing timing risk. For example, in the case of

selling a large number of shares, a fast liquidation will

cause the share price to drop, whereas a slow liquidation

will expose the seller to timing risk due to the

stochastic nature of the share price.

We compare optimal liquidation policies in continuous time in

the presence of trading impact using numerical solutions of

Hamilton Jacobi Bellman (HJB)partial differential equations

(PDE). In particular, we compare the time-consistent

mean-quadratic-variation strategy (Almgren and Chriss) with the

time-inconsistent (pre-commitment) mean-variance strategy.

The Almgren and Chriss strategy should be viewed as the

industry standard.

We show that the two different risk measures lead to very different

strategies and liquidation profiles.

In terms of the mean variance efficient frontier, the

original Almgren/Chriss strategy is signficently sub-optimal

compared to the (pre-commitment) mean-variance strategy.

This is joint work with Stephen Tse, Heath Windcliff and

Shannon Kennedy.

Fri, 17 Feb 2012

14:15 - 15:15
DH 1st floor SR

Implicit vs explicit schemes for non-linear PDEs and illustrations in Finance and optimal control.

Olivier Bokanowski
(UMA)
Abstract

We will first motivate and review some implicit schemes that arises from the discretization of non linear PDEs in finance or in optimal control problems - when using finite differences methods or finite element methods.

For the american option problem, we are led to compute the solution of a discrete obstacle problem, and will give some results for the convergence of nonsmooth Newton's method for solving such problems.

Implicit schemes are interesting for their stability properties, however they can be too costly in practice.

We will then present some novel schemes and ideas, based on the semi-lagrangian approach and on discontinuous galerkin methods, trying to be as much explicit as possible in order to gain practical efficiency.

Fri, 10 Feb 2012
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Good-deal bounds in a regime-switching diffusion market

Catherine Donnelly (Heriot-Watt)
Abstract

We consider the pricing of a maturity guarantee, which is equivalent to the pricing of a European put option, in a regime-switching market model. Regime-switching market models have been empirically shown to fit long-term stockmarket data better than many other models. However, since a regime-switching market is incomplete, there is no unique price for the maturity guarantee. We extend the good-deal pricing bounds idea to the regime-switching market model. This allows us to obtain a reasonable range of prices for the maturity guarantee, by excluding those prices which imply a Sharpe Ratio which is too high. The range of prices can be used as a plausibility check on the chosen price of a maturity guarantee.

Fri, 03 Feb 2012
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Transaction Costs, Trading Volume, and the Liquidity Premium

Stefan Gerold
(TU Wien)
Abstract

In a market with one safe and one risky asset, an investor with a long

horizon and constant relative risk aversion trades with constant

investment opportunities and proportional transaction costs. We derive

the optimal investment policy, its welfare, and the resulting trading

volume, explicitly as functions of the market and preference parameters,

and of the implied liquidity premium, which is identified as the

solution of a scalar equation. For small transaction costs, all these

quantities admit asymptotic expansions of arbitrary order. The results

exploit the equivalence of the transaction cost market to another

frictionless market, with a shadow risky asset, in which investment

opportunities are stochastic. The shadow price is also derived

explicitly. (Joint work with Paolo Guasoni, Johannes Muhle-Karbe, and

Walter Schachermayer)

Fri, 27 Jan 2012
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Modeling and Efficient Rare Event Simulation of Systemic Risk in Insurance-Reinsurance Networks (joint work with Yixi Shi).

Jose Blanchet
(Columbia)
Abstract

We propose a dynamic insurance network model that allows to deal with reinsurance counter-party default risks with a particular aim of capturing cascading effects at the time of defaults. We capture these effects by finding an equilibrium allocation of settlements which can be found as the unique optimal solution of a linear programming problem. This equilibrium allocation recognizes 1) the correlation among the risk factors, which are assumed to be heavy-tailed, 2) the contractual obligations, which are assumed to follow popular contracts in the insurance industry (such as stop-loss and retro-cesion), and 3) the interconnections of the insurance-reinsurance network. We are able to obtain an asymptotic description of the most likely ways in which the default of a specific group of insurers can occur, by means of solving a multidimensional Knapsack integer programming problem. Finally, we propose a class of provably strongly efficient estimators for computing the expected loss of the network conditioning the failure of a specific set of companies. Strong efficiency means that the complexity of computing large deviations probability or conditional expectation remains bounded as the event of interest becomes more and more rare.

Fri, 20 Jan 2012
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Monte Carlo Portfolio Optimization

William Shaw
(UCL)
Abstract

We develop the idea of using Monte Carlo sampling of random portfolios to solve portfolio investment problems. We explore the need for more general optimization tools, and consider the means by which constrained random portfolios may be generated. DeVroye’s approach to sampling the interior of a simplex (a collection of non-negative random variables adding to unity) is already available for interior solutions of simple fully-invested long-only systems, and we extend this to treat, lower bound constraints, bounded short positions and to sample non-interior points by the method of Face-Edge-Vertex-biased sampling. A practical scheme for long-only and bounded short problems is developed and tested. Non-convex and disconnected regions can be treated by applying rejection for other constraints. The advantage of Monte Carlo methods is that they may be extended to risk functions that are more complicated functions of the return distribution, without explicit gradients, and that the underlying return distribution may be modeled parametrically or empirically based on general distributions. The optimization of expected utility, Omega, Sortino ratios may be handled in a similar manner to quadratic risk, VaR and CVaR, irrespective of whether a reduction to LP or QP form is available. Robustification is also possible, and a Monte Carlo approach allows the possibility of relaxing the general maxi-min approach to one of varying degrees of conservatism. Grid computing technology is an excellent platform for the development of such computations due to the intrinsically parallel nature of the computation. Good comparisons with established results in Mean-Variance and CVaR optimization are obtained, and we give some applications to Omega and expected Utility optimization. Extensions to deploy Sobol and Niederreiter quasi-random methods for random weights are also proposed. The method proposed is a two-stage process. First we have an initial global search which produces a good feasible solution for any number of assets with any risk function and return distribution. This solution is already close to optimal in lower dimensions based on an investigation of several test problems. Further precision, and solutions in 10-100 dimensions, are obtained by invoking a second stage in which the solution is iterated based on Monte-Carlo simulation based on a series of contracting hypercubes.

Fri, 02 Dec 2011

14:15 - 15:15
L3

Multilevel dual approach for pricing American style derivatives

John Schoenmakers
(Berlin)
Abstract

In this article we propose a novel approach to reduce the computational

complexity of the dual method for pricing American options.

We consider a sequence of martingales that converges to a given

target martingale and decompose the original dual representation into a sum of

representations that correspond to different levels of approximation to the

target martingale. By next replacing in each representation true conditional expectations with their

Monte Carlo estimates, we arrive at what one may call a multilevel dual Monte

Carlo algorithm. The analysis of this algorithm reveals that the computational

complexity of getting the corresponding target upper bound, due to the target martingale,

can be significantly reduced. In particular, it turns out that using our new

approach, we may construct a multilevel version of the well-known nested Monte

Carlo algorithm of Andersen and Broadie (2004) that is, regarding complexity, virtually

equivalent to a non-nested algorithm. The performance of this multilevel

algorithm is illustrated by a numerical example. (joint work with Denis Belomestny)

Fri, 25 Nov 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Optimal discretization of hedging strategies with jumps

Mathieu Rosenbaum
(University Paris 6)
Abstract

In this work, we consider the hedging error due to discrete trading in models with jumps. We propose a framework enabling to

(asymptotically) optimize the discretization times. More precisely, a strategy is said to be optimal if for a given cost function, no strategy has

(asymptotically) a lower mean square error for a smaller cost. We focus on strategies based on hitting times and give explicit expressions for

the optimal strategies. This is joint work with Peter Tankov.

Tue, 15 Nov 2011
14:15
Oxford-Man Institute

Market Selection: Hungry Misers and Happy Bankrupts

Chris Rogers
(Cambridge)
Abstract

The Market Selection Hypothesis is a principle which (informally) proposes that `less knowledgeable' agents are eventually eliminated from the market. This elimination may take the form of starvation (the proportion of output consumed drops to zero), or may take the form of going broke (the proportion of asset held drops to zero), and these are not the same thing. Starvation may result from several causes, diverse beliefs being only one.We firstly identify and exclude these other possible causes, and then

prove that starvation is equivalent to inferior belief, under suitable technical conditions. On the other hand, going broke cannot be characterized solely in terms of beliefs, as we show. We next present a remarkable example with two agents with different beliefs, in which one agent starves yet amasses all the capital, and the other goes broke yet consumes all the output -- the hungry miser and the happy bankrupt.

This example also serves to show that although an agent may starve, he may have long-term impact on the prices. This relates to the notion of price impact introduced by Kogan et al (2009), which we correct in the final section, and then use to characterize situations where asymptotically equivalent

pricing holds.

Fri, 11 Nov 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

An Efficient Implementation of Stochastic Volatility by the method of Conditional Integration

William McGhee
(Royal Bank Scotland)
Abstract

In the SABR model of Hagan et al. [2002] a perturbative expansion approach yields a tractable approximation to the implied volatility smile. This approximation formula has been adopted across the financial markets as a means of interpolating market volatility surfaces. All too frequently - in stressed markets, in the long-dated FX regime - the limitations of this approximation are pronounced. In this talk a highly efficient conditional integration approach, motivated by the work of Stein and Stein [1991] and Willard [1997], will be presented that when applied to the SABR model not only produces a volatility smile consistent with the underlying SABR process but gives access to the joint distribution of the asset and its volatility. The latter is particularly important in understanding the dynamics of the volatility smile as it evolves through time and the subsequent effect on the pricing of exotic options.

William McGhee is Head of Hybrid Quantitative Analytics at The Royal Bank of Scotland and will also discuss within the context of this presentation the interplay of mathematical modelling and the technology infrastructure required to run a complex hybrids trading business and the benefits of highly efficient numerical algorithms."

Fri, 04 Nov 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Forward-backward systems for expected utility maximization

Ulrich Horst
(Berlin)
Abstract

In this paper we deal with the utility maximization problem with a

preference functional of expected utility type. We derive a new approach

in which we reduce the utility maximization problem with general utility

to the study of a fully-coupled Forward-Backward Stochastic Differential

Equation (FBSDE).

The talk is based on joint work with Ying Hu, Peter Imkeller, Anthony

Reveillac and Jianing Zhang.

Fri, 28 Oct 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

The emergence of probability-type properties of price paths

Vladmir Vovk
(Royal Holloway University of London)
Abstract

The standard approach to continuous-time finance starts from postulating a

statistical model for the prices of securities (such as the Black-Scholes

model). Since such models are often difficult to justify, it is

interesting to explore what can be done without any stochastic

assumptions. There are quite a few results of this kind (starting from

Cover 1991 and Hobson 1998), but in this talk I will discuss

probability-type properties emerging without a statistical model. I will

only consider the simplest case of one security, and instead of stochastic

assumptions will make some analytic assumptions. If the price path is

known to be cadlag without huge jumps, its quadratic variation exists

unless a predefined trading strategy earns infinite capital without

risking more than one monetary unit. This makes it possible to apply the

known results of Ito calculus without probability (Follmer 1981, Norvaisa)

in the context of idealized financial markets. If, moreover, the price

path is known to be continuous, it becomes Brownian motion when physical

time is replaced by quadratic variation; this is a probability-free

version of the Dubins-Schwarz theorem.

Fri, 21 Oct 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Multivariate utility maximization with proportional transaction costs and random endowment

Luciano Campi
(Paris 13)
Abstract

Abstract: In this paper we deal with a utility maximization problem at finite horizon on a continuous-time market with conical (and time varying) constraints (particularly suited to model a currency market with proportional transaction costs). In particular, we extend the results in \cite{CO} to the situation where the agent is initially endowed with a random and possibly unbounded quantity of assets. We start by studying some basic properties of the value function (which is now defined on a space of random variables), then we dualize the problem following some convex analysis techniques which have proven very useful in this field of research. We finally prove the existence of a solution to the dual and (under an additional boundedness assumption on the endowment) to the primal problem. The last section of the paper is devoted to an application of our results to utility indifference pricing. This is a joint work with G. Benedetti (CREST).

Fri, 24 Jun 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

A Multi-Period Bank Run Model for Liquidity Risk

Dr Eva Lutkebohmert
(University of Freiburg)
Abstract

We present a dynamic bank run model for liquidity risk where a financial institution finances its risky assets by a mixture of short- and long-term debt. The financial institution is exposed to liquidity risk as its short-term creditors have the possibility not to renew their funding at a finite number of rollover dates. Besides, the financial institution can default due to insolvency at any time until maturity. We compute both insolvency and illiquidity default probabilities in this multi-period setting. We show that liquidity risk is increasing in the volatility of the risky assets and in the ratio of the return that can be earned on the outside market over the return for short-term debt promised by the financial institution. Moreover, we study the influence of the capital structure on the illiquidity probability and derive that illiquidity risk is increasing with the ratio of short-term funding.

Fri, 17 Jun 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Explicit Construction of a Dynamic Bessel Bridge of Dimension 3

Dr Albina Danilova
(London School of Economics)
Abstract

Given a deterministically time-changed Brownian motion Z starting from 1, whose time-change V (t) satisfies $V (t) > t$ for all $t>=0$, we perform an explicit construction of a process X which is Brownian motion in its own filtration and that hits zero for the first time at V (s), where $s:= inf {t > 0 : Z_t = 0}$. We also provide the semimartingale decomposition of $X >$ under

the filtration jointly generated by X and Z. Our construction relies on a combination of enlargement of filtration and filtering techniques. The resulting process X may be viewed as the analogue of a 3-dimensional Bessel bridge starting from 1 at time 0 and ending at 0 at the random time $V (s)$.

We call this a dynamic Bessel bridge since V(s) is not known in advance. Our study is motivated by insider trading models with default risk.(this is a joint work with Luciano Campi and Umut Cetin)

Fri, 03 Jun 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Cross hedging with futures in a continuous-time model with a stationary spread

Prof Stefan Ankirchner
(University of Bonn)
Abstract

When managing risk, frequently only imperfect hedging instruments are at hand.

We show how to optimally cross-hedge risk when the spread between the hedging

instrument and the risk is stationary. At the short end, the optimal hedge ratio

is close to the cross-correlation of the log returns, whereas at the long end, it is

optimal to fully hedge the position. For linear risk positions we derive explicit

formulas for the hedge error, and for non-linear positions we show how to obtain

numerically effcient estimates. Finally, we demonstrate that even in cases with no

clear-cut decision concerning the stationarity of the spread it is better to allow for

mean reversion of the spread rather than to neglect it.

The talk is based on joint work with Georgi Dimitroff, Gregor Heyne and Christian Pigorsch.

Fri, 27 May 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Regularity of Value Functions for Nonsmooth Utility Maximization Problems

Dr Harry Zheng
(Imperial College London)
Abstract

In this talk we show that there exists a smooth classical solution to the HJB equation for a large class of constrained problems with utility functions that are not necessarily differentiable or strictly concave.

The value function is smooth if admissible controls satisfy an integrability condition or if it is continuous on the closure of its domain.

The key idea is to work on the dual control problem and the dual HJB equation. We construct a smooth, strictly convex solution to the dual HJB equation and show that its conjugate function is a smooth, strictly concave solution to the primal HJB equation satisfying the terminal and boundary conditions

Wed, 25 May 2011

12:45 - 13:45
Oxford-Man Institute

Explicit construction of a dynamic Bessel bridge of dimension 3

Dr Umut Cetin (London School of Economics)
Abstract

Given a deterministically time-changed Brownian motion Z starting from 1, whose time-change V (t) satisfies V (t) > t for all t > 0, we perform an explicit construction of a process X which is Brownian motion in its own filtration and that hits zero for the first time at V (S), where S := inf {t > 0 : Z_t = 0}. We also provide the semimartingale decomposition of X under the filtration jointly generated by X and Z. Our construction relies on a combination of enlargement of filtration and filtering techniques. The resulting process X may be viewed as the analogue of a 3-dimensional Bessel bridge starting from 1 at time 0 and ending at 0 at the random time V (S). We call this a dynamic Bessel bridge since S is not known at time 0 but is slowly revealed in time by observing Z. Our study is motivated by insider trading models with default risk. (this is a joint work with Luciano Campi and Albina Danilova)

Mon, 23 May 2011

17:00 - 18:00
Oxford-Man Institute

Options on Leveraged ETFs

Marco Avellaneda (Courant Institute, NYU)
Abstract

Leveraged ETFs are funds that target a multiple of the daily return of a reference asset; eg UYG (Proshares) targets twice the daily return of XLF (Financial SPDR) and SKF targets minus twice the daily return of XLF.

 It is well known that these leveraged funds have exposure to realized volatility. In particular, the relation between the leveraged and the unleveraged funds over a given time-horizon (larger than 1 day) is uncertain and will depend on the realized volatility. This talk examines this phenomenon theoretically and empirically first, and then uses this to price options on leveraged ETFs in terms of the prices of options on the underlying ETF. The resulting model allows to model the volatility skews of the leveraged and unleveraged funds in relation to each other and therefore suggest an arbitrage relation that could prove useful for traders and risk-managers.

Fri, 20 May 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Two Factor Models of a Firm's Capital Structure

Prof Tom Hurd
(McMaster University)
Abstract

We argue that a natural extension of the well known structural credit risk framework of Black and Cox is to model both the firm's assets and liabilities as correlated geometric Brownian motions. This financially reasonable assumption leads to a unification of equity derivatives (written on the stock price), and credit securities like bonds and credit default swaps (CDS), nesting the Black-Cox credit model with a particular stochastic volatility model for the stock. As we will see, it yields reasonable pricing performance with acceptable computational efficiency. However, it has been well understood how to extend a credit framework like this quite dramatically by the trick of time- changing the Brownian motions. We will find that the resulting two factor time-changed Brownian motion framework can encompass well known equity models such as the variance gamma model, and at the same time reproduce the stylized facts about default stemming from structural models of credit. We will end with some encouraging calibration results for a dataset of equity and credit derivative prices written on Ford Motor Company.

Wed, 18 May 2011
12:45
Oxford-Man Institute

A BSDE Approach to a Risk-Based Optimal Investment of an Insurer

Robert Elliott
(University of Adelaide and University of Calgary)
Abstract

We discuss a backward stochastic differential equation, (BSDE), approach to a risk-based, optimal investment problem of an insurer. A simplified continuous-time economy with two investment vehicles, namely, a fixed interest security and a share, is considered.

The insurer's risk process is modeled by a diffusion approximation to a compound Poisson risk process. The goal of the insurer is to select an optimal portfolio so as to minimize the risk described by a convex risk measure of his/her terminal wealth. The optimal investment problem is then formulated as a zero-sum stochastic differential game between the insurer and the market. The BSDE approach is used to solve the game problem. This leads to a simple and natural approach for the existence and uniqueness of an optimal strategy of the game problem without Markov assumptions. Closed-form solutions to the optimal strategies of the insurer and the market are obtained in some particular cases.

Fri, 06 May 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Stochastic expansions for averaged diffusions and applications to pricing

Prof Emmanuel Gobet
(Ecole Polytechnique)
Abstract

We derive a general methodology to approximate the law of the average of the marginal of diffusion processes. The average is computed w.r.t. a general parameter that is involved in the diffusion dynamics. Our approach is suitable to compute expectations of functions of arithmetic or geometric means. In the context of small SDE coefficients, we establish an expansion, which terms are explicit and easy to compute. We also provide non asymptotic error bounds. Applications to the pricing of basket options, Asian options or commodities options are then presented. This talk is based on a joint work with M. Miri.

Tue, 03 May 2011
14:15
Oxford-Man Institute

F-divergence minimal martingale measures and optimal portfolios for exponential Levy models with a change-point

Lioudmilla Vostrikova
(University of Angers)
Abstract

We study exponential Levy models with change-point which is a random variable, independent from initial Levy processes. On canonical space with initially enlarged filtration we describe all equivalent martingale measures for change-

point model and we give the conditions for the existence of f-minimal equivalent martingale measure. Using the connection between utility maximisation and f-divergence minimisation, we obtain a general formula for optimal strategy in change-point case for initially enlarged filtration and also for progressively enlarged filtration when the utility is exponential. We illustrate our results considering the Black-Scholes model with change-point.

Key words and phrases: f-divergence, exponential Levy models, change-point, optimal portfolio

MSC 2010 subject classifications: 60G46, 60G48, 60G51, 91B70

Fri, 04 Mar 2011
14:15
L3

Duality and Asymptotics in Portfolio Optimization with Transaction Costs

Johannes Muhle-Karbe
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract

We show how to solve optimization problems in the presence of proportional transaction costs by determining a shadow price, which is a solution to the dual problem. Put differently, this is a fictitious frictionless market evolving within the bid-ask spread, that leads to the same optimization problem as in the original market with transaction costs. In addition, we also discuss how to obtain asymptotic expansions of arbitrary order for small transaction costs. This is joint work with Stefan Gerhold, Paolo Guasoni, and Walter Schachermayer.

Fri, 25 Feb 2011
14:15
Oxford-Man Institute

Credit Models and the crisis: The importance of systemic risk and extreme scenarios in valuation

Prof Damiano Brigo
(King's College London)
Abstract

We present three examples of credit products whose valuation poses challenging modeling problems related to armageddon scenarios and extreme losses, analyzing their behaviour pre- and in-crisis.

The products are Credit Index Options (CIOs), Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs), and Credit Valuation Adjustment (CVA) related products. We show that poor mathematical treatment of possibly vanishing numeraires in CIOs and lack of modes in the tail of the loss distribution in CDOs may lead to inaccurate valuation, both pre- and especially in crisis. We also consider the limits of copula models in trying to represent systemic risk in credit intensity models. We finally enlarge the picture and comment on a number of common biases in the public perception of modeling in relationship with the crisis.

Fri, 18 Feb 2011

14:15 - 15:15
DH 1st floor SR

Reflected BSDE with a constraint and its application

Mingyu Xu
(Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing)
Abstract

Non-linear backward stochastic differential equations (BSDEs in

short) were firstly introduced by Pardoux and Peng (\cite{PP1990},
1990), who proved the existence and uniqueness of the adapted solution, under smooth square integrability assumptions on the coefficient and the terminal condition, and when the coefficient $g(t,\omega ,y,z)$ is Lipschitz in $(y,z)$ uniformly in $(t,\omega
)$. From then on, the theory of backward stochastic differential equations (BSDE) has been widely and rapidly developed. And many problems in mathematical finance can be treated as BSDEs. The natural connection between BSDE and partial differential equations (PDE) of parabolic and elliptic types is also important applications. In this talk, we study a new developement of BSDE, 
BSDE with contraint and reflecting barrier.
The existence and uniqueness results are presented and we will give some application of this kind of BSDE at last.
Wed, 16 Feb 2011
12:45
Oxford-Man Institute

tba

Prof. Dr. Ernst Eberlein
(Universitaet Freiburg)
Fri, 04 Feb 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Positive Volatility Simulation in the Heston Model

Dr Anke Wiese
(Heriot-Watt University)
Abstract

In the Heston stochastic volatility model, the variance process is given by a mean-reverting square-root process. It is known that its transition probability density can be represented by a non-central chi-square density. There are fundamental differences in the behaviour of the variance process depending on the number of degrees of freedom: if the number of degrees of freedom is larger or equal to 2, the zero boundary is unattainable; if it is smaller than 2, the zero boundary is attracting and attainable.

We focus on the attainable zero boundary case and in particular the case when the number of degrees of freedom is smaller than 1, typical in foreign exchange markets. We prove a new representation for the density based on powers of generalized Gaussian random variables. Further we prove that Marsaglia's polar method extends to the generalized Gaussian distribution, providing an exact and efficient method for generalized Gaussian sampling. Thus, we establish a new exact and efficient method for simulating the Cox-Ingersoll-Ross process for an attracting and attainable zero boundary, and thus establish a new simple method for simulating the Heston model.

We demonstrate our method in the computation of option prices for parameter cases that are described in the literature as challenging and practically relevant.

Fri, 28 Jan 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Capital Minimization as a Market Objective

Dr Dilip Madan
(University of Maryland)
Abstract

The static two price economy of conic finance is first employed to

define capital, profit, and subsequently return and leverage. Examples

illustrate how profits are negative on claims taking exposure to loss

and positive on claims taking gain exposure. It is argued that though

markets do not have preferences or objectives of their own, competitive

pressures lead markets to become capital minimizers or leverage

maximizers. Yet within a static context one observes that hedging

strategies must then depart from delta hedging and incorporate gamma

adjustments. Finally these ideas are generalized to a dynamic context

where for dynamic conic finance, the bid and ask price sequences are

seen as nonlinear expectation operators associated with the solution of

particular backward stochastic difference equations (BSDE) solved in

discrete time at particular tenors leading to tenor specific or

equivalently liquidity contingent pricing. The drivers of the associated

BSDEs are exhibited in complete detail.

Fri, 21 Jan 2011
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Affine Processes: theory, numerics and applications to Finance

Prof Josef Teichmann
(ETH Zurich)
Abstract

We present theory and numerics of affine processes and several of their applications in finance. The theory is appealing due to methods from probability theory, analysis and geometry. Applications are diverse since affine processes combine analytical tractability with a high flexibility to model stylized facts like heavy tails or stochastic volatility.

Fri, 03 Dec 2010
14:15
L3

The Heston model with stochastic interest rates and pricing options with Fourier-cosine expansions.

Kees Oosterlee
(Delft University of Technology)
Abstract

In this presentation we discuss the Heston model with stochastic interest rates driven by Hull-White or Cox-Ingersoll-Ross processes.

We present approximations in the Heston-Hull-White hybrid model, so that a characteristic function can be derived and derivative pricing can be efficiently done using the Fourier Cosine expansion technique.

This pricing method, called the COS method, is explained in some detail.

We furthermore discuss the effect of the approximations in the hybrid model on the instantaneous correlations, and check the influence of the correlation between stock and interest rate on the implied volatilities.

Fri, 26 Nov 2010
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

CANCELLED

CANCELLED
Fri, 19 Nov 2010
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

On the convergence of approximation schemes for equations arising in Finance

Guy Barles
(Universite Francois Rablelais)
Abstract

Abstract: describe several results on the convergence of approximation schemes for possibly degenerate, linear or nonlinear parabolic equations which apply in particular to equations arising in option pricing or portfolio management. We address both the questions of the convergence and the rate of convergence.

Fri, 12 Nov 2010
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

No-arbitrage criteria under small transaction costs

Yuri Kabanov
(Universite de Franche-Compte)
Abstract

The talk will be devoted to criteria of absence of arbitrage opportunities under small transaction costs for a family of multi-asset models of financial market.

Fri, 05 Nov 2010
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

On level crossing identities with applications in insurance and finance

Hansjoerg Albrecher
(Universite de Lausanne)
Abstract

In this talk a number of identities will be discussed that relate to the event of level crossing of certain types of stochastic processes. Some of these identities are surprisingly simple and have interpretations in surplus modelling of insurance portfolios, the design of taxation schemes, optimal dividend strategies and the pricing of barrier options.

Fri, 29 Oct 2010
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Stock Loans in Incomplete Markets

Matheus Grasselli
(McMaster University Canada)
Abstract

A stock loan is a contract between two parties: the lender, usually a bank or other financial institution providing a loan, and the borrower, represented by a client who owns one share of a stock used as collateral for the loan. Several reasons might motivate the client to get into such a deal. For example he might not want to sell his stock or even face selling restrictions, while at the same time being in need of available funds to attend to another financial operation. In Xia and Zhou (2007), a stock loan is modeled as a perpetual American option with a time varying strike and analyzed in detail within the Black-Scholes framework. In this paper, we extend the valuation of such loans to an incomplete market setting, which takes into account the natural trading restrictions faced by the client. When the maturity of the loan is infinite we obtain an exact formula for the value of the loan fee to be charged by the bank based on a result in Henderson (2007). For loans of finite maturity, we characterize its value using a variational inequality first presented in Oberman and Zariphopoulou (2003). In both cases we show analytically how the fee varies with the model parameters and illustrate the results numerically. This is joint work with Cesar G. Velez (Universidad Nacional de Colombia).

Fri, 22 Oct 2010
14:15
DH 1st floor SR

Optimal Static-Dynamic Hedging under Convex Risk Measures

Ronnie Sircar
(Princeton University)
Abstract

The theory and computation of convex measures of financial risk has been a very active area of Financial Mathematics, with a rich history in a short number of years. The axioms specify sensible properties that measures of risk should possess (and which the industry's favourite, value-at-risk, does not). The most common example is related to the expectation of an exponential utility function.

A basic application is hedging, that is taking off-setting positions, to optimally reduce the risk measure of a portfolio. In standard continuous-time models with dynamic hedging, this leads to nonlinear PDE problems of HJB type. We discuss so-called static-dynamic hedging of exotic options under convex risk measures, and specifically the existence and uniqueness of an optimal position. We illustrate the computational challenge when we move away from the risk measure associated with exponential utility.

Joint work with Aytac Ilhan (Goldman Sachs) and Mattias Jonsson (University of Michigan).

Tue, 12 Oct 2010
14:15
Eagle House

Stable Models for Large Equity Markets

Ioannis Karatzas
Abstract

We introduce and study ergodic multidimensional diffusion processes interacting through their ranks; these interactions lead to invariant measures which are in broad agreement with stability properties of large equity markets over long time-periods.

The models we develop assign growth rates and variances that depend on both the name (identity) and the rank (according to capitalization) of each individual asset.

Such models are able realistically to capture critical features of the observed stability of capital distribution over the past century, all the while being simple enough to allow for rather detailed analytical study.

The methodologies used in this study touch upon the question of triple points for systems of interacting diffusions; in particular, some choices of parameters may permit triple (or higher-order) collisions to occur. We show, however, that such multiple collisions have no effect on any of the stability properties of the resulting system. This is accomplished through a detailed analysis of intersection local times.

The theory we develop has connections with the analysis of Queueing Networks in heavy traffic, as well as with models of competing particle systems in Statistical Mechanics, such as the Sherrington-Kirkpatrick model for spin-glasses.

Fri, 18 Jun 2010
14:15
L3

Root's Barrier: Construction, Optimality and Applications to Variance Options

Alexander Cox
(Bath)
Abstract

"We investigate a construction of a Skorokhod embedding due to Root (1969), which has been the subject of recent interest for applications in Mathematical Finance (Dupire, Carr & Lee), where the construction has applications for model-free pricing and hedging of variance derivatives. In this context, there are two related questions: firstly of the construction of the stopping time, which is related to a free boundary problem, and in this direction, we expand on work of Dupire and Carr & Lee; secondly of the optimality of the construction, which is originally due to Rost (1976). In the financial context, optimality is connected to the construction of hedging strategies, and by giving a novel proof of the optimality of the Root construction, we are able to identify model-free hedging strategies for variance derivatives. Finally, we will present some evidence on the numerical performance of such hedges. (Joint work with Jiajie Wang)"