Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6894703 European Journal of Operational Research 2018 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
In many financial contracts (and in particular when trading OTC derivatives), participants are exposed to counterparty risk. The latter is typically rewarded by adjusting the “risk-free price” of derivatives; an adjustment known as credit value adjustment (CVA). A key driver of CVA is the dependency between exposure and counterparty risk, known as wrong-way risk (WWR). In practice however, correctly addressing WWR is very challenging and calls for heavy numerical techniques. This might explain why WWR is not explicitly handled in the Basel III regulatory framework in spite of its acknowledged importance. In this paper we propose a sound and tractable method to deal efficiently with WWR. Our approach consists in embedding the WWR effect in the drift of the exposure dynamics. Even though this calls for infinite changes of measures, we end up with an appealing compromise between tractability and mathematical rigor, preserving the level of accuracy typically required for CVA figures. The good performances of the method are discussed in a stochastic-intensity default setup based on extensive comparisons of expected positive exposure (EPE) profiles and CVA figures produced (i) by a full bivariate Monte Carlo implementation of the initial model with (ii) our drift-adjustment technique.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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