Analytical solvability and exact simulation in models with affine stochastic volatility and Levy jumps
被引:5
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作者:
Zeng, Pingping
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Southern Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Shenzhen, Peoples R ChinaSouthern Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Shenzhen, Peoples R China
Zeng, Pingping
[1
]
Xu, Ziqing
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机构:
Southern Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Shenzhen, Peoples R China
Hong Kong Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Hong Kong, Peoples R ChinaSouthern Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Shenzhen, Peoples R China
Xu, Ziqing
[1
,2
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Jiang, Pingping
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Soochow Univ, Ctr Financial Engn, Suzhou, Peoples R ChinaSouthern Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Shenzhen, Peoples R China
Jiang, Pingping
[3
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Kwok, Yue Kuen
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Hong Kong Univ Sci & Technol, Financial Technol Thrust, Guangzhou, Peoples R ChinaSouthern Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Shenzhen, Peoples R China
Kwok, Yue Kuen
[4
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机构:
[1] Southern Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Shenzhen, Peoples R China
[2] Hong Kong Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Math, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[3] Soochow Univ, Ctr Financial Engn, Suzhou, Peoples R China
[4] Hong Kong Univ Sci & Technol, Financial Technol Thrust, Guangzhou, Peoples R China
We investigate analytical solvability of models with affine stochastic volatility (SV) and Levy jumps by deriving a unified formula for the conditional moment generating function of the log-asset price and providing the condition under which this new formula is explicit. The results lay a foundation for a range of valuation, calibration, and econometric problems. We then combine our theoretical results, the Hilbert transform method, various interpolation techniques, with the dimension reduction technique to propose unified simulation schemes for solvable models with affine SV and Levy jumps. In contrast to traditional exact simulation methods, our approach is applicable to a broad class of models, maintains good accuracy, and enables efficient pricing of discretely monitored path-dependent derivatives. We analyze various sources of errors arising from the simulation approach and present error bounds. Finally, extensive numerical results demonstrate that our method is highly accurate, efficient, simple to implement, and widely applicable.