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                  The Fields Institute 2006-2007 
                    Seminar Series on Quantitative Finance 
                  sponsored by
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The Quantitative 
            Finance Seminar has been a centerpiece of the Commercial/Industrial 
            program at the Fields Institute since 1995. Its mandate is to arrange 
            talks on current research in quantitative finance that will be of 
            interest to those who work on the border of industry and academia. 
            Wide participation has been the norm with representation from mathematics, 
            statistics, computer science, economics, econometrics, finance and 
            operations research. Topics have included derivatives valuation, credit 
            risk, insurance and portfolio optimization. Talks occur on the last 
            Wednesday of every month throughout the academic year and start at 
            5 pm. Each seminar is  
            organized around a single theme with two 45-minute talks and a half 
            hour reception. There is no cost to attend these seminars and everyone 
            is welcome.
              To be informed of speakers and titles for upcoming seminars and 
              financial mathematics activities, please subscribe to the Fields 
              mail list. 
             
            Upcoming Seminars
             
              June 6, 2007 
              5:00 p.m. Reception 
              5:20 p.m. Kay Giesecke, Stanford University 
                 Pricing, hedging and calibrating credit from the top down 
                 
                A credit derivative is a contingent claim on the aggregate financial 
                loss in a portfolio of credit sensitive instruments such as loans, 
                bonds or credit swaps. We summarize our recent results on the 
                pricing, hedging and calibration of credit derivatives using point 
                processes. Topics include the representation of the conditional 
                transform of a point process, Markovian projection, random thinning, 
                time changes and simulation. The material is based on joint work 
                with  
                Xiaowei Ding, Eymen Errais, Lisa Goldberg, Baeho Kim and Pascal 
                Tomecek. 
               
             
             
             
              
              April 25, 2007  
               
               
                Bjorn Flesaker, Bloomberg 
                  Robust Replication of Default Contingent Claims 
                  We demonstrate how to replicate a broad class of single 
                  name credit derivatives with static positions in standard credit 
                  default swaps and a self-financing money market account balance. 
                  The survival contingent money market account balance is given 
                  as the solution to a certain second order linear (backward) 
                  ordinary differential equation, subject to terminal boundary 
                  conditions. The absence of arbitrage determines a linear valuation 
                  operator, and we derive the forward equation for its Green's 
                  function. We provide examples of closed form solutions for special 
                  cases, give an example of applications to credit index arbitrage, 
                  and show how the results motivate current market practice for 
                  credit curve stripping under essentially arbitrary default dynamics. 
                   
                  The talk is based on joint work with Peter Carr. 
                 
                and  
                Lane Hughston, King's College London 
                  Information, Inflation, and Interest 
                  We propose a class of discrete-time stochastic models for the 
                  pricing of inflation-linked assets. The paper begins with an 
                  axiomatic scheme for asset pricing and interest rate theory 
                  in a discrete-time setting. The first axiom introduces a risk-free 
                  asset, and the second axiom determines the intertemporal pricing 
                  relations that hold for dividend-paying assets. The nominal 
                  and real pricing kernels, in terms of which the price index 
                  can be expressed, are then modelled by introducing a Sidrauski-type 
                  utility function depending on (a) the aggregate rate of consumption, 
                  and (b) the aggregate rate of real liquidity benefit conferred 
                  by the money supply. Consumption and money supply policies are 
                  chosen such that the expected joint utility obtained over a 
                  specified time horizon is maximised subject to a budget constraint 
                  that takes into account the value of the liquidity benefit associated 
                  with the money supply. For any choice of the bivariate utility 
                  function, the resulting model determines a relation between 
                  the rate of consumption, the price level, and the money supply. 
                  The model also produces explicit expressions for the real and 
                  nominal pricing kernels, and hence establishes a basis for the 
                  valuation of inflation-linked securities. 
                Key words: Inflation, interest rate models, partial information, 
                  price level, money supply, consumption, liquidity benefit, utility, 
                  transversality condition. 
                Working paper (coauthored with Andrea Macrina) downloadable 
                  at: www.mth.kcl.ac.uk/research/finmath/ 
               
             
             
             
              March 28, 2007 
               
                David Saunders, University of Waterloo 
                  Pricing CDO Tranches of Bespoke Portfolios 
                  We present a robust and practical CDO valuation framework 
                  based on weighted Monte Carlo techniques used in option pricing. 
                  The methodology can be used to value consistently CDOs of bespoke 
                  portfolios, CDO-squared and cash CDOs. Under a multi-factor 
                  conditionally independent credit modelling framework, we use 
                  prices of liquid credit portfolio instruments to imply the "risk 
                  neutral" distributions for the underlying set of systematic 
                  factors driving joint obligor defaults. The methodology can 
                  be seen as an extension to the implied copula methodology (Hull 
                  and White 2006), where sector concentration risk of bespoke 
                  portfolios is modelled explicitly using a multi-factor credit 
                  model. The technique is illustrated by computing implied factor 
                  distributions for a Gaussian copula model using prices of standard 
                  tranches on CDS indices. Extensions to other static factor models 
                  and dynamic credit portfolio models are also discussed. 
                  *This research is joint work with Dan Rosen of the Fields 
                  Institute and R2 Financial Technologies.  
               
              and 
              
                Jaksa Cvitanic, California Institute of Technology 
                  Numerical estimation of volatility values from discretely 
                  observed diffusion data 
                  We consider a Black-Scholes type model, but with volatility 
                  being a Markov Chain process. Assuming that the stock price 
                  is observed at discrete, possibly random times, the goal is 
                  to estimate the current volatility value. The model parameters, 
                  that is, the possible volatility values and transition probabilities, 
                  are estimated using the Multiscale Trend Analysis method of 
                  Zaliapin, Gabrielov and Keilis-Borok, adapted to our framework. 
                  Once these are given, the volatility is estimated using the 
                  filtering formula developed in our previous work Cvitanic, Liptser 
                  and Rozovskii (2006). 
                  Our numerical implementation shows that the estimation is of 
                  very high quality under a range of conditions. Joint work with 
                  B. Rozovski and I. Zalyapin. 
               
               
              February 28, 2007 
               
               
                Ronnie Sircar, Princeton University 
                  Utility Valuation of Credit Derivatives 
                  We discuss the effect of investor risk-aversion on the valuation 
                  of single-name and multi-name credit derivatives. In particular, 
                  we analyze the utility-indifference pricing mechanism applied 
                  to defaultable bonds and CDOs. In the case of complex multi-dimensional 
                  products like CDOs, risk-aversion acts as an effective correlator 
                  of the times of the credit events of the various firms, which 
                  we illustrate from examples, including recent results with stochastic 
                  intensities. 
                  Joint work with Thaleia Zariphopoulou (University of Texas at 
                  Austin). 
                   
                  and  
                 Marcel Rindisbacher, University of Toronto 
                  Dynamic Asset Allocation: a Portfolio Decomposition Formula 
                  and Applications 
                  This paper establishes a new decomposition of the optimal 
                  portfolio policy in dynamic asset allocation models with arbitrary 
                  vNM preferences and Ito prices. The formula rests on a change 
                  of numéraire which consists in taking pure discount bonds 
                  as units of account. When expressed in this new numéraire 
                  the dynamic hedging demand is shown to have two components. 
                  If the individual cares solely about terminal wealth, the first 
                  hedge insures against fluctuations in a long term bond with 
                  maturity date matching the investor's horizon and face value 
                  determined by bequest preferences. The second hedge immunizes 
                  against fluctuations in the volatility of the forward density. 
                  When the individual also cares about intermediate consumption 
                  the first hedging component becomes a coupon-paying bond with 
                  coupon payments tailored to consumption needs. The decomposition 
                  formula is applied to examine the existence of preferred habitats, 
                  portfolio separation, the investment behavior of extremely risk 
                  averse individuals, the demand for long term bonds, the optimal 
                  international asset allocation rule, the preference for I-bonds 
                  in inflationary environments and the integration of fixed income 
                  management and asset allocation. 
                 
               
               
              November 29, 2006 
                "CANCELLED" 
               
              October 25, 2006  
               
               
                Michael J. Brennan, The Anderson School, UCLA 
                  Asset Pricing and Mispricing 
                  We develop models for stock returns when stock prices are 
                  subject to stochastic mispricing errors. We show that expected 
                  rates of return depend not only on the fundamental risk that 
                  is captured by a standard asset pricing model, but also on the 
                  type and degree of asset mispricing, even when the mispricing 
                  is zero on average. Empirically, the mispricing induced return 
                  bias, proxied either by Kalman filter estimates or by volatility 
                  and variance ratio of residual returns, are shown to be significantly 
                  associated with realized risk adjusted returns. This talk is 
                  based on joint work with Ashley Wang. 
                Thomas S. Salisbury, York University 
                  GMWBs 
                  Guaranteed Minimum Withdrawal Benefits already exist as 
                  a form of income insurance on a large fraction of variable annuity 
                  retirement savings plans in the US. Similar products are now 
                  beginning to be available in Canada. I'll discuss some of the 
                  valuation and risk management issues associated with such guarantees, 
                  both from the point of view of the issuer and the client. This 
                  talk is based on joint work with Moshe Milevsky. 
               
               
               
                 
                   
                     
                       
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