Slobodan Milovanović

2papers

2 Papers

CPAug 17, 2018
Pricing Derivatives under Multiple Stochastic Factors by Localized Radial Basis Function Methods

Slobodan Milovanović, Victor Shcherbakov

We propose two localized Radial Basis Function (RBF) methods, the Radial Basis Function Partition of Unity method (RBF-PUM) and the Radial Basis Function generated Finite Differences method (RBF-FD), for solving financial derivative pricing problems arising from market models with multiple stochastic factors. We demonstrate the useful features of the proposed methods, such as high accuracy, sparsity of the differentiation matrices, mesh-free nature and multi-dimensional extendability, and show how to apply these methods for solving time-dependent higher-dimensional PDEs in finance. We test these methods on several problems that incorporate stochastic asset, volatility, and interest rate dynamics by conducting numerical experiments. The results illustrate the capability of both methods to solve the problems to a sufficient accuracy within reasonable time. Both methods exhibit similar orders of convergence, which can be further improved by a more elaborate choice of the method parameters. Finally, we discuss the parallelization potentials of the proposed methods and report the speedup on the example of RBF-FD.

CPAug 17, 2018
Pricing Financial Derivatives using Radial Basis Function generated Finite Differences with Polyharmonic Splines on Smoothly Varying Node Layouts

Slobodan Milovanović

In this paper, we study the benefits of using polyharmonic splines and node layouts with smoothly varying density for developing robust and efficient radial basis function generated finite difference (RBF-FD) methods for pricing of financial derivatives. We present a significantly improved RBF-FD scheme and successfully apply it to two types of multidimensional partial differential equations in finance: a two-asset European call basket option under the Black--Scholes--Merton model, and a European call option under the Heston model. We also show that the performance of the improved method is equally high when it comes to pricing American options. By studying convergence, computational performance, and conditioning of the discrete systems, we show the superiority of the introduced approaches over previously used versions of the RBF-FD method in financial applications.