22 research outputs found
Funding, repo and credit inclusive valuation as modified option pricing
We take the holistic approach of computing an OTC claim value that
incorporates credit and funding liquidity risks and their interplays, instead
of forcing individual price adjustments: CVA, DVA, FVA, KVA. The resulting
nonlinear mathematical problem features semilinear PDEs and FBSDEs. We show
that for the benchmark vulnerable claim there is an analytical solution, and we
express it in terms of the Black-Scholes formula with dividends. This allows
for a detailed valuation analysis, stress testing and risk analysis via
sensitivities.Comment: 1 figur
Illustrating a problem in the self-financing condition in two 2010-2011 papers on funding, collateral and discounting
We illustrate a problem in the self-financing condition used in the papers
"Funding beyond discounting: collateral agreements and derivatives pricing"
(Risk Magazine, February 2010) and "Partial Differential Equation
Representations of Derivatives with Counterparty Risk and Funding Costs" (The
Journal of Credit Risk, 2011). These papers state an erroneous self-financing
condition. In the first paper, this is equivalent to assuming that the equity
position is self-financing on its own and without including the cash position.
In the second paper, this is equivalent to assuming that a subportfolio is
self-financing on its own, rather than the whole portfolio. The error in the
first paper is avoided when clearly distinguishing between price processes,
dividend processes and gain processes. We present an outline of the derivation
that yields the correct statement of the self-financing condition, clarifying
the structure of the relevant funding accounts, and show that the final result
in "Funding beyond discounting" is correct, even if the self-financing
condition stated is not.Comment: added references, a footnote and updated abstrac
Impact of the first to default time on Bilateral CVA
We compare two different bilateral counterparty valuation adjustment (BVA)
formulas. The first formula is an approximation and is based on subtracting the
two unilateral Credit Valuation Adjustment (CVA)'s formulas as seen from the
two different parties in the transaction. This formula is only a simplified
representation of bilateral risk and ignores that upon the first default
closeout proceedings are ignited. As such, it involves double counting. We
compare this formula with the fully specified bilateral risk formula, where the
first to default time is taken into account. The latter correct formula depends
on default dependence between the two parties, whereas the simplified one does
not. We also analyze a candidate simplified formula in case the replacement
closeout is used upon default, following ISDA's recommendations, and we find
the simplified formula to be the same as in the risk free closeout case. We
analyze the error that is encountered when using the simplified formula in a
couple of simple products: a zero coupon bond, where the exposure is
unidirectional, and an equity forward contract where exposure can go both ways.
For the latter case we adopt a bivariate exponential distribution due to Gumbel
to model the joint default risk of the two parties in the deal. We present a
number of realistic cases where the simplified formula differs considerably
from the correct one
Analytical valuation of vulnerable derivative contracts with bilateral cash flows under credit, funding and wrong-way risks
We study the problem of valuing a vulnerable derivative with bilateral cash
flows between two counterparties in the presence of funding, credit and
wrong-way risks, and derive a closed-form valuation formula for an at-the-money
(ATM) forward contract as well as a second order approximation for the general
case. We posit a model with heterogeneous interest rates and default occurrence
and infer a Cauchy problem for the pre-default valuation function of the
contract, which includes ab initio any counterparty risk - as opposed to
calculating valuation adjustments collectively known as XVA. Under a specific
funding policy which linearises the Cauchy problem, we obtain a generic
probabilistic representation for the pre-default valuation (Theorem 1). We
apply this general framework to the valuation of an equity forward and
establish the contract can be expressed as a continuous portfolio of European
options with suitably chosen strikes and expiries under a particular
probability measure (Theorem 2). Our valuation formula admits a closed-form
expression when the forward contract is ATM (Corollary 2) and we derive a
second order approximation in moneyness when the contract is close to ATM
(Theorem 3). Numerical results of our model show that the forward is more
sensitive to funding factors than credit ones, while higher stock funding costs
increase sensitivity to credit spreads and wrong-way risk.Comment: 43 pages, 4 figure