273 research outputs found
Perturbed Copula: Introducing the skew effect in the co-dependence
Gaussian copulas are widely used in the industry to correlate two random
variables when there is no prior knowledge about the co-dependence between
them. The perturbed Gaussian copula approach allows introducing the skew
information of both random variables into the co-dependence structure. The
analytical expression of this copula is derived through an asymptotic expansion
under the assumption of a common fast mean reverting stochastic volatility
factor. This paper applies this new perturbed copula to the valuation of
derivative products; in particular FX quanto options to a third currency. A
calibration procedure to fit the skew of both underlying securities is
presented. The action of the perturbed copula is interpreted compared to the
Gaussian copula. A real worked example is carried out comparing both copulas
and a local volatility model with constant correlation for varying maturities,
correlations and skew configurations.Comment: 34 pages, 6 figures and 3 table
Diversity and Arbitrage in a Regulatory Breakup Model
In 1999 Robert Fernholz observed an inconsistency between the normative
assumption of existence of an equivalent martingale measure (EMM) and the
empirical reality of diversity in equity markets. We explore a method of
imposing diversity on market models by a type of antitrust regulation that is
compatible with EMMs. The regulatory procedure breaks up companies that become
too large, while holding the total number of companies constant by imposing a
simultaneous merge of other companies. The regulatory events are assumed to
have no impact on portfolio values. As an example, regulation is imposed on a
market model in which diversity is maintained via a log-pole in the drift of
the largest company. The result is the removal of arbitrage opportunities from
this market while maintaining the market's diversity.Comment: 21 page
A Fast Mean-Reverting Correction to Heston's Stochastic Volatility Model
We propose a multi-scale stochastic volatility model in which a fast
mean-reverting factor of volatility is built on top of the Heston stochastic
volatility model. A singular pertubative expansion is then used to obtain an
approximation for European option prices. The resulting pricing formulas are
semi-analytic, in the sense that they can be expressed as integrals.
Difficulties associated with the numerical evaluation of these integrals are
discussed, and techniques for avoiding these difficulties are provided.
Overall, it is shown that computational complexity for our model is comparable
to the case of a pure Heston model, but our correction brings significant
flexibility in terms of fitting to the implied volatility surface. This is
illustrated numerically and with option data
Spectral Decomposition of Option Prices in Fast Mean-Reverting Stochastic Volatility Models
Using spectral decomposition techniques and singular perturbation theory, we
develop a systematic method to approximate the prices of a variety of options
in a fast mean-reverting stochastic volatility setting. Four examples are
provided in order to demonstrate the versatility of our method. These include:
European options, up-and-out options, double-barrier knock-out options, and
options which pay a rebate upon hitting a boundary. For European options, our
method is shown to produce option price approximations which are equivalent to
those developed in [5].
[5] Jean-Pierre Fouque, George Papanicolaou, and Sircar Ronnie. Derivatives
in Financial Markets with Stochas- tic Volatility. Cambridge University Press,
2000
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