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Trolle-Schwartz HJM interest rate model

The Trolle and Schwartz (2009) interest rate model prices interest rate derivatives in a generalised stochastic volatility framework. It is a reformulation of the multifactor Heath, Jarrow and Morton (1992) framework with stochastic volatility terms presented in an analogous fashion to the seminal H...

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Main Author: Schumann, Gareth William
Other Authors: McWalter, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Actuarial Science 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Schumann, Gareth William
author2 McWalter, Thomas
author_browse McWalter, Thomas
Schumann, Gareth William
author_facet McWalter, Thomas
Schumann, Gareth William
author_sort Schumann, Gareth William
collection Thesis
description The Trolle and Schwartz (2009) interest rate model prices interest rate derivatives in a generalised stochastic volatility framework. It is a reformulation of the multifactor Heath, Jarrow and Morton (1992) framework with stochastic volatility terms presented in an analogous fashion to the seminal Heston (1993) model. The Trolle and Schwartz (2009) model provides semi-analytical pricing formulas for zerocoupon bonds and zero-coupon bond options. These formulas are extended to price interest rate caplets, and therefore caps, as well as swaptions. These formulas are described as semi-analytical because of the use of numerical methods as well as their dependency on unobserved state variables. These state variables are estimated by applying an extended Kalman filter on a dataset of interest rates and interest rate derivative prices. Although Trolle and Schwartz (2009) confirm the accuracy of their model when testing against empirical prices, they do not provide an analysis of the consistency between the semi-analytical formulas and Monte Carlo pricing. Presenting this test for consistency seeks to confirm the validity of these pricing formulas. The aim of this dissertation is to implement the Trolle and Schwartz (2009) model and discuss the performance of the semi-analytical pricing formulas against a Monte Carlo simulation. Emphasis will be placed firstly on reviewing the derivations outlined in Trolle and Schwartz (2009) and secondly, building a Monte Carlo framework capable of comparing prices with the semi-analytical pricing formulas. Simulated data will be considered for the purpose of confirming that the estimation of the state vector is sufficiently accurate. Thereafter, an analysis on an empirical dataset can determine whether the results hold across different sets of data.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:52:22.449Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisherStr Division of Actuarial Science
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/23030 Trolle-Schwartz HJM interest rate model Schumann, Gareth William McWalter, Thomas Kienitz, Jörg Mathematical Finance The Trolle and Schwartz (2009) interest rate model prices interest rate derivatives in a generalised stochastic volatility framework. It is a reformulation of the multifactor Heath, Jarrow and Morton (1992) framework with stochastic volatility terms presented in an analogous fashion to the seminal Heston (1993) model. The Trolle and Schwartz (2009) model provides semi-analytical pricing formulas for zerocoupon bonds and zero-coupon bond options. These formulas are extended to price interest rate caplets, and therefore caps, as well as swaptions. These formulas are described as semi-analytical because of the use of numerical methods as well as their dependency on unobserved state variables. These state variables are estimated by applying an extended Kalman filter on a dataset of interest rates and interest rate derivative prices. Although Trolle and Schwartz (2009) confirm the accuracy of their model when testing against empirical prices, they do not provide an analysis of the consistency between the semi-analytical formulas and Monte Carlo pricing. Presenting this test for consistency seeks to confirm the validity of these pricing formulas. The aim of this dissertation is to implement the Trolle and Schwartz (2009) model and discuss the performance of the semi-analytical pricing formulas against a Monte Carlo simulation. Emphasis will be placed firstly on reviewing the derivations outlined in Trolle and Schwartz (2009) and secondly, building a Monte Carlo framework capable of comparing prices with the semi-analytical pricing formulas. Simulated data will be considered for the purpose of confirming that the estimation of the state vector is sufficiently accurate. Thereafter, an analysis on an empirical dataset can determine whether the results hold across different sets of data. 2017-01-25T13:48:51Z 2017-01-25T13:48:51Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/23030 eng application/pdf Division of Actuarial Science Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Mathematical Finance
Schumann, Gareth William
Trolle-Schwartz HJM interest rate model
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Trolle-Schwartz HJM interest rate model
title_full Trolle-Schwartz HJM interest rate model
title_fullStr Trolle-Schwartz HJM interest rate model
title_full_unstemmed Trolle-Schwartz HJM interest rate model
title_short Trolle-Schwartz HJM interest rate model
title_sort trolle schwartz hjm interest rate model
topic Mathematical Finance
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/23030
work_keys_str_mv AT schumanngarethwilliam trolleschwartzhjminterestratemodel