American Options in the Heston Model With Stochastic Interest Rate

American Options in the Heston Model With Stochastic Interest Rate
Author: Svetlana Boyarchenko
Publisher:
Total Pages: 22
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

We consider the Heston model with the stochastic interest rate of the CIR type and more general models with stochastic volatility and interest rates depending on two CIR - factors. Time derivative and infinitesimal generator of the process for factors that determine the dynamics of the interest rate and/or volatility are discretized. The result is a sequence of embedded perpetual options arising in the time - discretization of a Markov - modulated Levy model. Options in this sequence are solved using an iteration method based on the Wiener - Hopf factorization. Typical shapes of the early exercise boundary are shown, and good agreement of option prices with prices calculated with the Longstaff - Schwartz method and Medvedev - Scaillet asymptotic method is demonstrated.

American Options in Levy Models with Stochastic Volatility

American Options in Levy Models with Stochastic Volatility
Author: Svetlana Boyarchenko
Publisher:
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

A general numerical method for pricing American options in regime switching jump diffusion models of stock dynamics with stochastic interest rates and/or volatility is developed. Time derivative and infinitesimal generator of the process for factors that determine the dynamics of the interest rate and/or volatility are discretized. The result is a sequence of embedded perpetual options in a Markov-modulated Levy model. Options in the sequence are solved using an iteration method based on the Wiener-Hopf factorization. As an application, an explicit algorithm for the case of a Levy process with the intensity coefficient driven by the square root process with embedded jumps is derived. Numerical examples corroborate the general result about a gap between strike and early exercise boundary at expiry, in a neighborhood of r=0, in the presence of jumps.

American Options in Lévy Models with Stochastic Interest Rates

American Options in Lévy Models with Stochastic Interest Rates
Author: Svetlana Boyarchenko
Publisher:
Total Pages: 31
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

A general numerical method for pricing American options in regime-switching jump-diffusion models of stock dynamics with stochastic interest rates and/or volatility is developed. Time derivative and infinitesimal generator of the process for factors that determine the dynamics of the interest rate and/or volatility are discretized. The result is a sequence of embedded perpetual options in a Markov-modulated Leacute;vy model. Options in this sequence are solved using an iteration method based on the Wiener-Hopf factorization. An explicit algorithm for the case of positive stochastic interest rates driven by a process of the Ornstein-Uhlenbeck type is derived. Efficiency of the method is illustrated with numerical examples.

American Options in Regime-Switching Lévy Models With Non-Semibounded Stochastic Interest Rates

American Options in Regime-Switching Lévy Models With Non-Semibounded Stochastic Interest Rates
Author: Svetlana Boyarchenko
Publisher:
Total Pages: 6
Release: 2008
Genre:
ISBN:

A general numerical method for pricing American options in regime-switching jump-diffusion models of stock dynamics with stochastic interest rates and/or volatility is developed. Time derivative and infinitesimal generator of the process for factors that determine the dynamics of the interest rate and/or volatility are discretized. The result is a sequence of embedded perpetual options in a Markov-modulated Leacute;vy model. Options in this sequence are solved using an iteration method based on the Wiener-Hopf factorization. Contrary to the earlier version of the method, the interest rate may assume non-positive values. As applications, explicit algorithms for Vasicek and Black's models with jumps are derived. Numerical examples show that the option prices in these two models are very close.

American Options in Regime-Switching Models

American Options in Regime-Switching Models
Author: Svetlana Boyarchenko
Publisher:
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2007
Genre:
ISBN:

In the paper, we solve the pricing problem for American options in Markov-modulated Levy models. The early exercise boundaries and prices are calculated using a generalization of Carr's randomization for regime-switching models. The pricing procedure is efficient even if the number of states is large provided the transition rates are not large w.r.t. the riskless rates. The payoffs and riskless rates may depend on a state. Special cases are stochastic volatility models and models with stochastic interest rate; both must be modelled as finite-state Markov chains.

Perpetual American Options in Regime-Switching Models

Perpetual American Options in Regime-Switching Models
Author: Svetlana Boyarchenko
Publisher:
Total Pages: 27
Release: 2007
Genre:
ISBN:

In the paper, we solve the pricing problem for perpetual American options in Markov-modulated Levy models. The early exercise boundaries and prices are calculated using an iteration procedure. The pricing procedure is efficient even if the number of states is large provided the transition rates are not large w.r.t. the riskless rates. The payoffs and riskless rates may depend on a state. Special cases are stochastic volatility models and models with stochastic interest rate; both must be modelled as finite-state Markov chains.

Essays on American Options Pricing Under Levy Models with Stochastic Volatility and Jumps

Essays on American Options Pricing Under Levy Models with Stochastic Volatility and Jumps
Author: Ye Chen
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

In ``A Multi-demensional Transform for Pricing American Options Under Stochastic Volatility Models", we present a new transform-based approach for pricing American options under low-dimensional stochastic volatility models which can be used to construct multi-dimensional path-independent lattices for all low-dimensional stochastic volatility models given in the literature, including SV, SV2, SVJ, SV2J, and SVJ2 models. We demonstrate that the prices of European options obtained using the path-independent lattices converge rapidly to their true prices obtained using quasi-analytical solutions. Our transform-based approach is computationally more efficient than all other methods given in the literature for a large class of low-dimensional stochastic volatility models. In ``A Multi-demensional Transform for Pricing American Options Under Levy Models", We extend the multi-dimensional transform to Levy models with stochastic volatility and jumps in the underlying stock price process. Efficient path-independent tree can be constructed for both European and American options. Our path-independent lattice method can be applied to almost all Levy models in the literature, such as Merton (1976), Bates (1996, 2000, 2006), Pan (2002), the NIG model, the VG model and the CGMY model. The numerical results show that our method is extemly accurate and fast. In ``Empirical performance of Levy models for American Options", we investigate in-sample fitting and out-of-sample pricing performance on American call options under Levy models. The drawback of the BS model has been well documented in the literatures, such as negative skewness with excess kurtosis, fat tail, and non-normality. Therefore, many models have been proposed to resolve known issues associated the BS model. For example, to resolve volatility smile, local volatility, stochastic volatility, and diffusion with jumps have been considered in the literatures; to resolve non-normality, non-Markov processes have been considered, e.g., Poisson process, variance gamma process, and other type of Levy processes. One would ask: what is the gain from each of the generalized models? Or, which model is the best for option pricing? We address these problems by examining which model results in the lowest pricing error for American style contracts. For in-sample analysis, the rank (from best to worst) is Pan, CGMYsv, VGsv, Heston, CGMY, VG and BS. And for out-of-sample pricing performance, the rank (from best to worst) is CGMYsv, VGsv, Pan, Heston, BS, VG, and CGMY. Adding stochastic volatility and jump into a model improves American options pricing performance, but pure jump models are worse than the BS model in American options pricing. Our empirical results show that pure jump model are over-fitting, but not improve American options pricing when they are applied to out-of-sample data.

Interest-Rate Option Models

Interest-Rate Option Models
Author: Riccardo Rebonato
Publisher:
Total Pages: 408
Release: 1996-09-12
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN:

An accessible, first-rate overview of interest rate dependent options for traders and institutional investors Until now market professionals seeking to exploit the profit potential of interest rate dependent options were forced to hunt through esoteric journals for a crumb or two of practical knowledge about their use. This accessible book narrows the information gap. Written in easy-to-follow, non-technical language, it logically reviews all the most commonly used interest rate option models, showing how each one can be applied and implemented for specific market applications. DR. RICARDO REBONATO (London, England) is head of Research, Debt Capital Markets at Barclays de Zoete Wedd Ltd.

Discrete-Time Valuation of American Options with Stochastic Interest Rates

Discrete-Time Valuation of American Options with Stochastic Interest Rates
Author: Kaushik I. Amin
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

We develop an arbitrage-free discrete time model to price American-style claims for which domestic term structurerisk, foreign term structure risk and currency risk are important. This model combines a discrete version of the Heath, Jarrow, Morton (1992) term structure model with the binomial model of Cox, Ross, and Rubinstein (1979). It converges (weakly) to the continuous time models in Amin and Jarrow (1991, 1992). The general model is quot;path dependentquot; and can be implemented with arbitrary volatility functions to value claims with maturity up to five years. The model is illustrated with applications to long-dated American currency warrants and a cross-rate swap from the quanto class.