TRLGJul 18, 2024

Dynamic Pricing in Securities Lending Market: Application in Revenue Optimization for an Agent Lender Portfolio

arXiv:2407.13687v42 citationsh-index: 15
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This work addresses revenue optimization for agent lenders in the securities lending market, representing an incremental application of existing methods to a new domain.

The paper tackles the problem of optimizing revenue in securities lending by applying contextual bandit frameworks for dynamic pricing, showing that this approach outperforms traditional methods by at least 15% in total revenue based on offline evaluation with real historical data.

Securities lending is an important part of the financial market structure, where agent lenders help long term institutional investors to lend out their securities to short sellers in exchange for a lending fee. Agent lenders within the market seek to optimize revenue by lending out securities at the highest rate possible. Typically, this rate is set by hard-coded business rules or standard supervised machine learning models. These approaches are often difficult to scale and are not adaptive to changing market conditions. Unlike a traditional stock exchange with a centralized limit order book, the securities lending market is organized similarly to an e-commerce marketplace, where agent lenders and borrowers can transact at any agreed price in a bilateral fashion. This similarity suggests that the use of typical methods for addressing dynamic pricing problems in e-commerce could be effective in the securities lending market. We show that existing contextual bandit frameworks can be successfully utilized in the securities lending market. Using offline evaluation on real historical data, we show that the contextual bandit approach can consistently outperform typical approaches by at least 15% in terms of total revenue generated.

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