490 likes | 882 Views
Derivative Pricing. Black-Scholes Model Pricing exotic options in the Black-Scholes world Beyond the Black-Scholes world Interest rate derivatives Credit risk. Interest Rate Derivatives. Products whose payoffs depend in some way on interest rates. Underlying Interest rates Basic products
E N D
Derivative Pricing • Black-Scholes Model • Pricing exotic options in the Black-Scholes world • Beyond the Black-Scholes world • Interest rate derivatives • Credit risk
Interest Rate Derivatives Products whose payoffs depend in some way on interest rates.
Underlying Interest rates Basic products Zero-coupon bonds Coupon-bearing bonds Other products Callable bonds Bond options Swap, swaptions …… Underlying Stocks Basic products Vanilla call/put options Exotic options Barrier options Asian options Lookback options …… Interest Rate Derivatives vs Stock Options
Why Pricing Interest Rate Derivatives is Much More Difficult to Value Than Stock Options? • The behavior of an interest rate is more complicated than that of a stock price • Interest rates are used for discounting as well as for defining the payoff For some cases (HJM models): • The whole term structure of interest rates must be considered; not a single variable • Volatilities of different points on the term structure are different
Outline • Short rate model • Model calibration: yield curve fitting • HJM model
Zero-Coupon Bond • A contract paying a known fixed amount, the principal, at some given date in the future, the maturity date T. • An example: maturity: T=10 years principle: $100
Coupon-Bearing Bond • Besides the principal, it pays smaller quantities, the coupons, at intervals up to and including the maturity date. • An example: Maturity: 3 years Principal: $100 Coupons: 2% per year
Bond Pricing • Zero-coupon bonds • At maturity, Z(T)=1 • Pricing Problem: Z(t)=? for t<T • If the interest rate is constant, then
Continued • Suppose r=r(t), a known deterministic function. Then
Short Rate • r(t) short rate or spot rate • Interest rate from a money-market account • short term • not predictable
Short Rate Model • dr=u(r,t)dt+(r,t)dW • Z=Z(r,t;T) • Z(r,T;T)=1 • Z(r,t;T)=? for t<T
Remarks • Risk-Neutral Process of Short Rate dr=(u(r,t)-(r,t)(r,t))dt+(r,t)dW • The pricing equation holds for any interest rate derivatives whose values V=V(r,t)
Interest rate HIGH interest rate has negative trend Reversion Level LOW interest rate has positive trend Tractable Models • Rules about choosing u(r,t)-(r,t)(r,t) and (r,t) • analytic solutions for zero-coupon bonds. • positive interest rates • mean reversion
Named Models • Vasicek • Cox, Ingersoll & Ross • Ho & Lee • Hull & White
Vasicek Model dr=( - r) dt+cdW • The first mean reversion model • Shortage: the spot rate might be negative • Zero-coupon bond’s value
Cox,Ingersoll & Ross Model • Mean reversion model with positive spot rate • Explicit solution is available for zero-coupon bonds
Ho Lee Model • The first no-arbitrage model
Extending Vasicek Model:Hull White Model dr(t)=( (t) - r) dt+cdW • A no-arbitrage model
Yield Curve Fitting • Ho-Lee Model • Hull-White Model
Tractable Models • Rules about choosing u(r,t)-(r,t)w(r,t) and w(r,t) • analytic solutions for zero-coupon bonds. • positive interest rates • mean reversion • Equilibrium Models: • Vasicek • Cox, Ingersoll & Ross • No-arbitrage models • Ho & Lee • Hull & White
Other Models • Black, Derman & Toy (BDT) • Black & Karasinski
Callable Bonds • An example: zero-coupon callable bond
Disadvantage of the Spot Rate Models • They do not give the user complete freedom in choosing the volatility.
HJM Model • Heath, Jarrow & Morton (1992) • To model the forward rate
Continued • The PDE approach cannot be used to implement the HJM model • Contrast with the pricing of an Asian option. • In general, the binomial tree method is not applicable, too.
Monte-Carlo Simulation Assume that we have chosen a model for the forward rate volatility v(t,T) for all T. Today is t*, and the forward rate curve is F(t*;T). • Simulate a realized evolution of the risk-neutral forward rate for the necessary length of time. 2. Using this forward rate path calculate the value of all the cash flows that would have occurred. 3. Using the realized path for the spot interest rate r(t) calculate the present value of these cash flows. Note that we discount at the continuously compounded risk-free rate. • Return to Step 1 to perform another realization, and continue until we have a sufficiently large number of realizations to calculate the expected present value as accurately as required.
Disadvantages • The simulation may be very slow. • It is not easy to deal with American style options
Links with the Spot Rate Models • Ho-Lee Model • Vasicek Model
Multi-factor Models • HJM model • Spot rate model
BGM Model • It is hard to calibrate the HJM model • BGM is a LIBOR Model. • Martingale theory and advanced SDE knowledge are involved.