Abstract

In this paper, we prove that the conditional dependence structure of default times in the model of A Bottom-Up Model of Portfolio Credit Risk. Part I: Copula Perspective belongs to the class of Marshall-Olkin copulas. This allows us to derive a factor representation in terms of common-shocks, the latter being able to trigger simultaneous defaults in some prespecified groups of obligors. This representation depends on the current default state of the credit portfolio so that fast convolution pricing schemes can be exploited for pricing and hedging credit portfolio derivatives. As emphasized in A Bottom-Up Model of Portfolio Credit Risk: Part I: Copula Perspective, the innovative breakthrough of this dynamic bottom-up model is a suitable decoupling property between the dependence structure and the default marginals as in Dynamic Modeling of Dependence in Finance via Copulae Between Stochastic Processes (like in static models but here in a full-flesh dynamic Markov copula model). Given the fast deterministic pricing schemes of the present paper, the model can then be jointly calibrated to single-name and portfolio data in two steps, as opposed to a global joint optimization procedures involving all the model parameters at the same time which would be untractable numerically. We illustrate this numerically by results of calibration against market data from CDO tranches as well as individual CDS spreads. We also discuss hedging sensitivities computed in the models thus calibrated.

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