Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5077569 Insurance: Mathematics and Economics 2007 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
For insurance risks, jump processes such as homogeneous/non-homogeneous compound Poisson processes and compound Cox processes have been used to model aggregate losses. If we consider the economic assumption of a positive interest to aggregate losses, Lévy processes have proven to be useful. Also in financial modelling, it has been observed that diffusion models are not robust enough to capture the appearance of jumps in underlying asset prices and interest rates. As a result, jump diffusion processes, which are, simply speaking, combinations of compound Poisson processes with Brownian motion, have gained popularity for modelling in insurance and finance. In this paper, considering a jump diffusion process, we obtain the explicit expression of the joint Laplace transform of the distribution of a jump diffusion process and its integrated process, assuming that jump size follows the mixture of two exponential distributions, which is a special case of phase-type distributions. Based on this Laplace transform, we derive the moments of the aggregate accumulated claim amounts of insurance risk. For a financial application, we concern non-defaultable zero-coupon bond pricing. We also provide several numerical examples for the moments of aggregate accumulated claims and default-free zero-coupon bond prices.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Statistics and Probability
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