1,503 research outputs found
Path-dependent SDEs in Hilbert spaces
We study path-dependent SDEs in Hilbert spaces. By using methods based on
contractions in Banach spaces, we prove existence and uniqueness of mild
solutions, continuity of mild solutions with respect to perturbations of all
the data of the system, G\^ateaux differentiability of generic order n of mild
solutions with respect to the starting point, continuity of the G\^ateaux
derivatives with respect to all the data. The analysis is performed for generic
spaces of paths that do not necessarily coincide with the space of continuous
functions
The end of the waterfall: Default resources of central counterparties
Central counterparties (CCPs) have become pillars of the new global financial architecture following the financial crisis of 2008. The key role of CCPs in mitigating counterparty risk and contagion has in turn cast them as systemically important financial institutions whose eventual failure may lead to potentially serious consequences for financial stability, and prompted discussions on CCP risk management standards and safeguards for recovery and resolutions of CCPs in case of failure. We contribute to the debate on CCP default resources by focusing on the incentives generated by the CCP loss allocation rules for the CCP and its members and discussing how the design of loss allocation rules may be used to align these incentives in favor of outcomes which benefit financial stability. After reviewing the ingredients of the CCP loss waterfall and various proposals for loss recovery provisions for CCPs, we examine the risk management incentives created by different ingredients in the loss waterfall and discuss possible approaches for validating the design of the waterfall. We emphasize the importance of CCP stress tests and argue that such stress tests need to account for the interconnectedness of CCPs through common members and cross-margin agreements. A key proposal is that capital charges on assets held against CCP Default Funds should depend on the quality of the risk management of the CCP, as assessed through independent stress tests
Credit default swaps and financial stability
Credit default swaps (CDSs), initially intended as instruments for hedging and managing credit risk, have been pinpointed during the recent crisis as being detrimental to financial stability. We argue that the impact of credit default swap markets on financial stability crucially depends on clearing mechanisms and capital and liquidity requirements for large protection sellers. In particular, the culprits are not so much speculative or “naked” credit default swaps but inadequate risk management and supervision of protection sellers. When protection sellers are inadequately capitalised, OTC (over-the-counter) CDS markets may act as channels for contagion and systemic risk. On the other hand, a CDS market where all major dealers participate in a central clearing facility with adequate reserves can actually contribute to mitigating systemic risk. In the latter case, a key element is the risk management of the central counterparties, for which we outline some recommendations.
Credit default swaps and systemic risk
We present a network model for investigating the impact on systemic risk of central clearing of over the counter (OTC) credit default swaps (CDS). We model contingent cash flows resulting from CDS and other OTC derivatives by a multi-layered network with a core-periphery structure, which is flexible enough to reproduce the gross and net exposures as well as the heterogeneity of market shares of participating institutions. We analyze illiquidity cascades resulting from liquidity shocks and show that the contagion of illiquidity takes place along a sub-network constituted by links identified as ’critical receivables’. A key role is played by the long intermediation chains inherent to the structure of the OTC network, which may turn into chains of critical receivables. We calibrate our model to data representing net and gross OTC exposures of large dealer banks and use this model to investigate the impact of central clearing on network stability. We find that, when interest rate swaps are cleared, central clearing of credit default swaps through a well-capitalized CCP can reduce the probability and the magnitude of a systemic illiquidity spiral by reducing the length of the chains of critical receivables within the financial network. These benefits are reduced, however, if some large intermediaries are not included as clearing members
Ergodic transition in a simple model of the continuous double auction
We study a phenomenological model for the continuous double auction, whose aggregate order process is equivalent to two independent M/M/1 queues. The continuous double auction defines a continuous-time random walk for trade prices. The conditions for ergodicity of the auction are derived and, as a consequence, three possible regimes in the behavior of prices and logarithmic returns are observed. In the ergodic regime, prices are unstable and one can observe a heteroskedastic behavior in the logarithmic returns. On the contrary, non-ergodicity triggers stability of prices, even if two different regimes can be seen
The Price Impact of Order Book Events
We study the price impact of order book events - limit orders, market orders
and cancelations - using the NYSE TAQ data for 50 U.S. stocks. We show that,
over short time intervals, price changes are mainly driven by the order flow
imbalance, defined as the imbalance between supply and demand at the best bid
and ask prices. Our study reveals a linear relation between order flow
imbalance and price changes, with a slope inversely proportional to the market
depth. These results are shown to be robust to seasonality effects, and stable
across time scales and across stocks. We argue that this linear price impact
model, together with a scaling argument, implies the empirically observed
"square-root" relation between price changes and trading volume. However, the
relation between price changes and trade volume is found to be noisy and less
robust than the one based on order flow imbalance
Mass spectrum from stochastic Levy-Schroedinger relativistic equations: possible qualitative predictions in QCD
Starting from the relation between the kinetic energy of a free
Levy-Schroedinger particle and the logarithmic characteristic of the underlying
stochastic process, we show that it is possible to get a precise relation
between renormalizable field theories and a specific Levy process. This
subsequently leads to a particular cut-off in the perturbative diagrams and can
produce a phenomenological mass spectrum that allows an interpretation of
quarks and leptons distributed in the three families of the standard model.Comment: 8 pages, no figures. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1008.425
Cubature on Wiener space in infinite dimension
We prove a stochastic Taylor expansion for SPDEs and apply this result to
obtain cubature methods, i. e. high order weak approximation schemes for SPDEs,
in the spirit of T. Lyons and N. Victoir. We can prove a high-order weak
convergence for well-defined classes of test functions if the process starts at
sufficiently regular initial values. We can also derive analogous results in
the presence of L\'evy processes of finite type, here the results seem to be
new even in finite dimension. Several numerical examples are added.Comment: revised version, accepted for publication in Proceedings Roy. Soc.
A Reply to Professors Cain and Charles
This Reply follows the responses of Professor Bruce Cain and Professor Guy-Uriel Charles to Professor Lessig’s essay "What an Originalist Would Understand 'Corruption' to Mean," 102 Calif. L. Rev. 1 (2014)
Price Drops, Fluctuations, and Correlation in a Multi-Agent Model of Stock Markets
In this paper we compare market price fluctuations with the response to
fundamental price drops within the Lux-Marchesi model which is able to
reproduce the most important stylized facts of real market data. Major
differences can be observed between the decay of spontaneous fluctuations and
of changes due to external perturbations reflecting the absence of detailed
balance, i.e., of the validity of the fluctuation-dissipation theorem. We found
that fundamental price drops are followed by an overshoot with a rather robust
characteristic time.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables; submitted to Physica
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