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                   THE 
                    FIELDS INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH IN MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES 
                    20th 
                    ANNIVERSARY 
                    YEAR  
                     
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                            Actuarial 
                            Science and Mathematical Finance Group Meetings 2012-13 
                            at 
                            the Fields Institute, Stewart Library
                          Organizer: 
                          Sebastian Jaimungal (U of Toronto) 
                           
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            OVERVIEW
            The Actuarial Science and Mathematical Finance research group meets 
            on a regular basis to discuss various problems and methods that arise 
            in Finance and Actuarial Science. These informal meetings are held 
            at the Fields Institute for Mathematical Sciences and are open to 
            the public. Talks range from original research to reviews of classical 
            papers and overviews of new and interesting mathematical and statistical 
            techniques/frameworks that arise in the context of Finance and Actuarial 
            Science. This seminar series is sponsored in part by Mprime through 
            the research project  Finsurance 
            : Theory, Computation and Applications. 
             
            Meetings are normally held on Thursdays in the  Stewart Library, 
            but check calendar for exceptions. If you are interested in presenting 
            in this series please contact the seminar organizer: Professor Sebastian 
            Jaimungal (sebastian [dot] jaimungal [at] utoronto [dot] ca). 
            
            
   
     
      | Upcoming 
        Seminars | 
     
     
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         TBA 
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      | Past Seminars | 
     
     
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         Thursday, March 14, 2013 
          5:00 p.m.  
          Stewart Library 
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          Takashi Shibata, Tokyo Metroplitan University  
          Investment timing, debt structure, and financing constraints 
         
          We introduce debt issuance limit constraints along with market debt 
            and bank debt to consider how financial frictions affect investment, 
            financing, and debt structure strategies. Our model provides four 
            important results. First, a firm is more likely to issue market debt 
            than bank debt when its debt issuance limit increases. Second, investment 
            strategies are nonmonotonic with respect to debt issuance limits. 
            Third, debt issuance limits distort the relationship between a firm's 
            equity value and investment strategy. Finally, debt issuance limit 
            constraints lead to debt holders experiencing low risk and low returns. 
            That is, the more severe the debt issuance limits, the lower the credit 
            spreads and default probabilities. Our theoretical results are consistent 
            with stylized facts and empirical results. This is joint work with 
            Michi Nishihara, Osaka University.  
         
           
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      Tuesday 
        March 5th  
        at 5pm. 
         
         
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         Mikhail Zhitlukhin, University of Manchester 
          Disorder detection problems for diffusion processes and their applications 
          in finance 
         
          We consider several questions related to problems of quickest disorder 
            detection for diffusion processes. By a disorder we mean an unknown 
            moment of time when the structure of an observable process changes, 
            e.g. a drift appears. In the first part of the talk we present general 
            results on the existence of Markov sufficient statistics and show 
            how disorder detection problems can be reduced to Markovian optimal 
            stopping problems. In particular, we solve disorder problems for Brownian 
            motion with a disorder on a finite time segment. In the second part 
            of the talk we apply the results obtained to practical questions of 
            choosing the optimal time to sell an asset which initially has a positive 
            trend and then the trend reverses at some unknown moment of time. 
            We test our criteria on real market data and show that they give relatively 
            good results. (This is a joint work with A.N. Shiryaev and W.T. Ziemba.) 
           
         
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         Thursday Sept. 20 
          5:00 p.m. 
         
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      Mikhail Krayzler (Dept. 
        Mathematics, Technische Universität München) 
        Pricing of Guaranteed Minimum Benefits in Variable Annuities 
         
          The worldwide market of variable annuities (VAs) has been rapidly 
            growing since their introduction in the mid-1980s in the United States. 
            These fund-linked annuity products, which have become an essential 
            part of the retirement plans in many countries, are often combined 
            with additional living and death benefits. Since they are usually 
            of a complex nature, consistent pricing of variable annuities becomes 
            a difficult task. As there is often a trade-off between a realistic 
            model and analytical tractability, several studies in the literature 
            either focus on closed-form solutions, by simplifying the contract 
            setups and the modeling assumptions, or propose numerical methods 
            for the multi-factor models. This work aims to fill this gap by showing 
            how the explicit representations for prices of some of the VA products 
            can be derived in a hybrid model for insurance and market risks. 
           
         
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         Thursday Sept. 6 
          5:00 p.m. 
         
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         Lane Hughston (University College London) 
          Signal Processing with Lévy Information 
         
          Lévy processes, which have stationary independent increments, 
            are ideal for modelling the various types of noise that can arise 
            in communication channels. If a Lévy process admits exponential 
            moments, then there exists a parametric family of measure changes 
            called Esscher transformations. If the parameter is replaced with 
            an independent random variable, the true value of which represents 
            a message, then under the transformed measure the original 
            Lévy process takes on the character of an information 
            process. In this paper we develop a theory of such Lévy 
            information processes. The underlying Lévy process, which we 
            call the fiducial process, represents the noise type. 
            Each such noise type is capable of carrying a message of a certain 
            specification. A number of examples are worked out in detail, including 
            information processes of the Brownian, Poisson, gamma, variance gamma, 
            negative binomial, inverse Gaussian, and normal inverse Gaussian type. 
            Although in general there is no additive decomposition of information 
            into signal and noise, one is led nevertheless for each noise type 
            to a well-defined scheme for signal detection and enhancement relevant 
            to a variety of practical situations. In this presentation we also 
            consider applications to the theory of finance. (Joint work with Dorje 
            C. Brody, Brunel University, and Xun Yang, Imperial College London. 
            The paper can be found at: arxiv.org/abs/1207.4028v1)  
         
        
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            Past Seminars 2011-12 
            Past Seminars 2010-11 
            Past Semainrs 2009-10 
            Past Seminars 2008-09 
            
              
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