Sequential Monte Carlo Methods for Option Pricing
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3168706
DOI10.1080/07362994.2011.548993zbMath1217.91201arXiv1005.4797MaRDI QIDQ3168706
Publication date: 19 April 2011
Published in: Stochastic Analysis and Applications (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://arxiv.org/abs/1005.4797
91G60: Numerical methods (including Monte Carlo methods)
65C05: Monte Carlo methods
91-02: Research exposition (monographs, survey articles) pertaining to game theory, economics, and finance
91G20: Derivative securities (option pricing, hedging, etc.)
Related Items
A note on random walks with absorbing barriers and sequential Monte Carlo methods, Some contributions to sequential Monte Carlo methods for option pricing, An adaptive Monte Carlo algorithm for European and American options, A new hybrid Monte Carlo simulation for Asian options pricing, Option pricing under stochastic volatility models with latent volatility, Linear variance bounds for particle approximations of time-homogeneous Feynman-Kac formulae, Convergence rates of attractive-repulsive MCMC algorithms, Multilevel particle filters for Lévy-driven stochastic differential equations, Digital barrier options pricing: an improved Monte Carlo algorithm, Control variates and conditional Monte Carlo for basket and Asian options, An Introduction to Particle Methods with Financial Applications, American Option Valuation with Particle Filters
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Unnamed Item
- Particle approximations of the score and observed information matrix in state space models with application to parameter estimation
- Inference with non-Gaussian Ornstein-Uhlenbeck processes for stochastic volatility
- On adaptive resampling strategies for sequential Monte Carlo methods
- On adaptive stratification
- A nonasymptotic theorem for unnormalized Feynman-Kac particle models
- Sequential Monte Carlo pricing of American-style options under stochastic volatility models
- Sequential Monte Carlo smoothing with application to parameter estimation in nonlinear state space models
- Monte Carlo methods for derivatives of options with discontinuous payoffs
- Sensitivity estimates for portfolio credit derivatives using Monte Carlo
- Central limit theorem for sequential Monte Carlo methods and its application to Bayesian inference
- A Continuity Correction for Discrete Barrier Options
- Non-Gaussian Ornstein–Uhlenbeck-based Models and Some of Their Uses in Financial Economics
- Sequential Monte Carlo Methods in Practice
- Asymptotically Optimal Importance Sampling and Stratification for Pricing Path-Dependent Options
- Pricing General Barrier Options: A Numerical Approach Using Sharp Large Deviations
- Importance Sampling for Stochastic Simulations
- Exact and Computationally Efficient Likelihood-Based Estimation for Discretely Observed Diffusion Processes (with Discussion)
- Sequential Monte Carlo Samplers
- Stochastic Volatility: Option Pricing using a Multinomial Recombining Tree
- Derivative-free Greeks for the Barndorff-Nielsen and Shephard stochastic volatility model
- Particle Filters for Partially Observed Diffusions
- Conditioning on One-Step Survival for Barrier Option Simulations
- Sequential Imputations and Bayesian Missing Data Problems
- Estimating Security Price Derivatives Using Simulation
- Monte Carlo Evaluation of Greeks for Multidimensional Barrier and Lookback Options
- Filtering via Simulation: Auxiliary Particle Filters
- Note: On the Interchange of Derivative and Expectation for Likelihood Ratio Derivative Estimators
- Sequential Monte Carlo methods for diffusion processes
- A backward particle interpretation of Feynman-Kac formulae
- Stopping-Time Resampling for Sequential Monte Carlo Methods
- Exact retrospective Monte Carlo computation of arithmetic average Asian options
- A Finite Difference Scheme for Option Pricing in Jump Diffusion and Exponential Lévy Models
- Simulating normalizing constants: From importance sampling to bridge sampling to path sampling
- Applications of Malliavin calculus to Monte-Carlo methods in finance. II
- Monte Carlo strategies in scientific computing