Abstract
This paper presents a novel risk-based approach for an optimal asset allocation problem with default risk, where a money market account, an ordinary share and a defaultable security are investment opportunities in a general non-Markovian economy incorporating random market parameters. The objective of an investor is to select an optimal mix of these securities such that a risk metric of an investment portfolio is minimized. By adopting a sub-additive convex risk measure, which takes into account interest rate risk, as a measure for risk, the investment problem is discussed mathematically in a form of a two-player, zero-sum, stochastic differential game between the investor and the market. A backward stochastic differential equation approach is used to provide a flexible and theoretically sound way to solve the game problem. Closed-form expressions for the optimal strategies of the investor and the market are obtained when the penalty function is a quadratic function and when the risk measure is a sub-additive coherent risk measure. An important case of the general non-Markovian model, namely the self-exciting threshold diffusion model with time delay, is considered. Numerical examples based on simulations for the self-exciting threshold diffusion model with and without time delay are provided to illustrate how the proposed model can be applied in this important case. The proposed model can be implemented using Excel spreadsheets.
Highlights
Risk measurement and management are crucially important issues in the modern finance and insurance industries
Elliott and Siu (2011a) applied a backward stochastic differential equations (BSDE) approach to study a risk-based, optimal investment problem of an insurer, where the risk faced by the insurer was described by a convex risk measure and the problem was formulated as a zero-sum stochastic differential game
Before we discuss the concept of cash sub-additive convex risk measures, we review the definition of a convex risk measure
Summary
Risk measurement and management are crucially important issues in the modern finance and insurance industries. Elliott and Siu (2011a) applied a BSDE approach to study a risk-based, optimal investment problem of an insurer, where the risk faced by the insurer was described by a convex risk measure and the problem was formulated as a zero-sum stochastic differential game. A considerable effort has been made on extending Merton’s structural model (1974) in different directions, the observable firm value assumption is questioned from the practical perspective Another approach to price default risk is a. Kraft and Steffensen (2008) investigated an optimal portfolio decision making problem in the presence of corporate bonds, where default risk was modeled by a reduced-form intensity-based model.
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