This paper extends quadratic hedging from European to Bermudan options in
discrete time when markets are incomplete and investigates its use for
supporting exercise policy optimization. The key idea is to construct date
specific approximate replicating portfolios. Hedging any given exercise policy
can be done by solving a collection of stochastic dynamic programs. Optimizing
the exercise policy based on the resulting martingale measure requires care. If
this measure is risk neutral (RN), the value of an optimal such policy, which
can be obtained by augmenting the hedging model with an exercise policy
optimization step, is a no arbitrage one. Otherwise this approach must be
refined by imposing time consistency on exercise policies, although the value
of the resulting exercise policy may not be arbitrage free. Following the
common pragmatic strategy of specifying quadratic hedging under an RN measure,
e.g., one calibrated to market prices, avoids these issues. In particular, it
provides a simple hedging policy with immediate practical applicability and is
equivalent to exercise policy optimization under RN valuation, thus
complementing it with a consistent hedging policy. A simple numerical example
shows that this procedure generates effective hedging policies