Book Review: ‘Energy Derivatives: Pricing and Risk Management’ by Clewlow and Strickland, 2000 Anatoliy Swishchuk Math & Comp Lab Dept of Math & Stat,

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Presentation transcript:

Book Review: ‘Energy Derivatives: Pricing and Risk Management’ by Clewlow and Strickland, 2000 Anatoliy Swishchuk Math & Comp Lab Dept of Math & Stat, U of C ‘Lunch at the Lab’ Talk November 7 th, 2006

About the Authors: Clewlow, Les

About the Authors: Strickland, Chris

About the Authors: Kaminski, Vince

About the Authors: Masson, Grant

About the Authors: Chahal, Ronnie

Contents Preface 11 Chapters References: 125 Index

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 3 (cntd)

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 8 (cntd)

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 11 (cntd)

Chapter 1

Ch. 1 (1.1. Intro to Energy Derivatives) A Derivative Security: security whose payoff depends on the value of other more basic variables Deregulation of energy markets: the need for risk management Energy derivatives-one of the fastest growing of all derivatives markets The simplest types of derivatives: forward and futures contracts

Ch.1 (Forwards and Futures) A Futures contract: agreement to buy or sell the underlying asset in the spot market (spot asset) at a predetermined time in the future for a certain price, which is agreed today. A Forward contract: agreement to transact on fixed terms at a future date, but these are direct between two parties. F=S exp [(c - y) (T-t)]

Ch.1 (Options Contracts) Two types: Call and Put Call Options: gives the holder the right, but not obligation, to buy the spot asset on or before the predetermined date (the maturity date) at a certain price (the strike price), which is agreed today. Differ from forward and futures: payment at the time the contract is entered into (option price)

Ch.1 (Options Contracts II)

Ch. 1(1.2. Fundamentals of Modelling and Pricing) F. Black, M. Scholes, R. Merton (1973)-BSM approach SDE (GBM)

Ch. 1 (1.2. Fundamentals of Modelling and Pricing II) F. Black, M. Scholes, R. Merton (1973)-BSM approach PDE

Ch. 1 (1.2. Fundamentals of Modelling and Pricing III) F. Black, M. Scholes, R. Merton (1973)- BSM approach Solution

Ch. 1 (1.2. Fundamentals of Modelling and Pricing IV) Merton (1973) P(T,t)-price at time t of a pure discount bond with maturity date T BSM formula

Ch. 1 (1.3. Numerical Techniques) Trinomial Tree Method (this book) Monte Carlo Simulation (this book) Finite difference schemes (another one) Numerical integration (-//-) Finite element methods (-//-)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method) Alternative to binomial model by Cox, Ross, Rubinstein (1979): continuous-time limit is the GBM Provide a better approximation to a continuous price process Easier to work with (more regular grid and more flexible)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method II)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method III)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method IV)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method V)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method VI)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method VII)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method VIII) (The value of option)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method IX) (‘backward induction’)

Ch. 1 ( The Trinomial Method X) (The value of option)

Monte Carlo Simulation (MCS) MCS: estimation of the expectation of the discounted payoff of an option by computing the average of a large number of discounted payoff computed via simulation Felim Boyle (UW, 1977)-first applied MCS to the pricing of financial instruments

Monte Carlo Simulation (MCS) II

Monte Carlo Simulation (MCS) III

Monte Carlo Simulation (MCS): Criticisms The speed with which derivative values can be evaluated (treatment: variance reduction technique) Inability to handle American options (treatment: combination of tree and simulation)

Summary

The End Thank You for Your Attention!

Next Talk: Chapter 2: Understanding and Analysing Spot Prices Speaker: Ouyang, Yuyuan (Lance) November 17, 2006, 12:00pm, MS 543

Distribution list of Chapters: Ch 1,3,6-Anatoliy Ch 2,7-Lance Ch 4,8-Matt Ch 5,9-Matthew Ch 10-Xu Ch 11-Greg