Abstract

This paper considers a general reduced-form pricing model for credit derivatives where default intensities are driven by some factor process X. The process X is not directly observable for investors in secondary markets; rather, their information set consists of the default history and of noisy price observations for traded credit products. In this context the pricing of credit derivatives leads to a challenging nonlinear-filtering problem. We provide recursive updating rules for the filter, derive a finite-dimensional filter for the case where X follows a finite-state Markov chain, and propose a novel particle-filtering algorithm. A numerical case study illustrates the properties of the proposed algorithms.

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