Hi,
I've checked in some classes into Instruments, MonteCarlo, and PricingEngines to price Barrier Options. I have wrapped the existing analytic Pricer inside a PricingEngine, and done a MonteCarlo PricingEngine. There are two PathPricers, one is a naive biased pricer and the other uses the Brownian Bridge correction, as in: "Simulating Path-Dependent Options: A New Approach" - M. El Babsiri and G. Noel Journal of Derivatives; Winter 1998; 6, 2 and "Going to Extremes: Correcting Simulation Bias in Exotic Option Valuation" - D.R. Beaglehole, P.H. Dybvig and G. Zhou Financial Analysts Journal; Jan/Feb 1997; 53, 1 The current design is not the best, as the algorithm needs an independent sample from a uniform [0,1] distribution, so this should probably come from the same generator as the PathGenerator via some Template mechanism. Currently it is nastily hard coded - beware! I have an example class that I could check in. What is the overall idea for the examples? We could end up with a great deal of Example code if we include Examples for every type of option, TermStructure, SV, Jumps, etc. What do people think? Cheers, Neil --------------------------------------------------- Neil Firth Brasenose College Oxford OX1 4AJ United Kingdom Office: 01865 280616 [hidden email] http://www.maths.ox.ac.uk/~firth --------------------------------------------------- |
At 12:44 PM 9/23/03, Neil P Firth wrote:
>I've checked in some classes into Instruments, MonteCarlo, and >PricingEngines to price Barrier Options. <description snipped> Hmm. Here go my hopes of releasing a mostly bug-fix release in the near future... no, just kidding. It looks like a nice contribution. I'm particularly intrigued by the biased path pricer---it's the first of the sort. >I have an example class that I could check in. An example CLASS? Java programming raises its ugly head... :) >What is the overall idea for the examples? We could end up with a great >deal of Example code if we include Examples for every type of option, >TermStructure, SV, Jumps, etc. >What do people think? I'd rather turn the example into a test. If the papers you used give any data, check that you can reproduce them (within an accuracy, of course.) And yes, I would certainly have a test for every type of option. As for examples, they started as half-witted tests before we had any real one, and some QuantLib founder I won't name on this list still uses them to insert any code he wants to test, because it's too much work for him to clone a new Visual Studio project---which incidentally, is the reason why the European Option example spits out a number of ugly, unformatted figures about quanto and forward options :) Anyway, we can keep them in order to showcase some feature, but I would discourage an extensive coverage of the library through examples---the development time would be better spent on writing tests. Later, Luigi |
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