Risk Magazine Cutting Edge Research Article | Pathwise XVA Greeks for Early-Exercise Products
quantitative research

Risk Magazine Cutting Edge Research Article | Pathwise XVA Greeks for Early-Exercise Products

Price sensitivities to risk factors, otherwise known as Greeks, have recently been just as challenging to calculate as they are essential in efficient risk management and regulatory reporting. This is especially true in the case of derivatives with early exercise features, such as Bermudan options, where exercise is allowed at certain specified dates before expiration.

It becomes even more complicated and time-consuming when one has to price valuation adjustments (XVAs) for these instruments, as this involves computation of the future values of the derivative at each exercise point.

Distributions of future values are computed using Monte Carlo simulations and regression. Finding Greeks, on the other hand, requires differentiation of these regressions at each future value, which can be computationally very intensive.

In this Cutting Edge research article published in the January 2018 Issue of Risk Magazine, Drs. Alexander Antonov, Serguei Issakov, Michael Konikov, Andy McClelland, and Serguei Mechkov maintain that differentiation of regressions can be avoided for some derivatives instruments and highlights how avoiding differentiation has two advantages – speed and accuracy. Using a new Numerix technique, Greeks can be computed almost as quickly as the time it takes to price the derivatives. Cutting the step of differentiating regressions also helps reduce noise in the estimation.

Authors: Drs. Alexander Antonov, Serguei Issakov, Michael Konikov, Andy McClelland, Serguei Mechkov

Price sensitivities to risk factors, otherwise known as Greeks, have recently been just as challenging to calculate as they are essential in efficient risk management and regulatory reporting. This is especially true in the case of derivatives with early exercise features, such as Bermudan options, where exercise is allowed at certain specified dates before expiration.

It becomes even more complicated and time-consuming when one has to price valuation adjustments (XVAs) for these instruments, as this involves computation of the future values of the derivative at each exercise point.

Distributions of future values are computed using Monte Carlo simulations and regression. Finding Greeks, on the other hand, requires differentiation of these regressions at each future value, which can be computationally very intensive.

In this Cutting Edge research article published in the January 2018 Issue of Risk Magazine, Drs. Alexander Antonov, Serguei Issakov, Michael Konikov, Andy McClelland, and Serguei Mechkov maintain that differentiation of regressions can be avoided for some derivatives instruments and highlights how avoiding differentiation has two advantages – speed and accuracy. Using a new Numerix technique, Greeks can be computed almost as quickly as the time it takes to price the derivatives. Cutting the step of differentiating regressions also helps reduce noise in the estimation.

Authors: Drs. Alexander Antonov, Serguei Issakov, Michael Konikov, Andy McClelland, Serguei Mechkov

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