Survivor Derivatives (survivor + derivative)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Survivor Derivatives: A Consistent Pricing Framework

JOURNAL OF RISK AND INSURANCE, Issue 3 2010
Paul Dawson
Survivorship risk is a significant factor in the provision of retirement income. Survivor derivatives are in their early stages and offer potentially significant welfare benefits to society. This article applies the approach developed by Dowd et al. (2006), Olivier and Jeffery (2004), Smith (2005), and Cairns (2007) to derive a consistent framework for pricing a wide range of linear survivor derivatives, such as forwards, basis swaps, forward swaps, and futures. It then shows how a recent option pricing model set out by Dawson et al. (2009) can be used to price nonlinear survivor derivatives, such as survivor swaptions, caps, floors, and combined option products. It concludes by considering applications of these products to a pension fund that wishes to hedge its survivorship risks. [source]


Options on normal underlyings with an application to the pricing of survivor swaptions

THE JOURNAL OF FUTURES MARKETS, Issue 8 2009
Paul Dawson
Survivor derivatives are gaining considerable attention in both the academic and practitioner communities. Early trading in such products has generally been confined to products with linear payoffs, both funded (bonds) and unfunded (swaps). History suggests that successful linear payoff derivatives are frequently followed by the development of option-based products. The random variable in the survivor swap pricing methodology developed by Dowd et al [2006] is (approximately) normally, rather than lognormally, distributed and thus a survivor swaption calls for an option pricing model in which the former distribution is incorporated. We derive such a model here, together with the Greeks and present a discussion of its application to the pricing of survivor swaptions. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Jrl Fut Mark 29:757,774, 2009 [source]


Survivor Derivatives: A Consistent Pricing Framework

JOURNAL OF RISK AND INSURANCE, Issue 3 2010
Paul Dawson
Survivorship risk is a significant factor in the provision of retirement income. Survivor derivatives are in their early stages and offer potentially significant welfare benefits to society. This article applies the approach developed by Dowd et al. (2006), Olivier and Jeffery (2004), Smith (2005), and Cairns (2007) to derive a consistent framework for pricing a wide range of linear survivor derivatives, such as forwards, basis swaps, forward swaps, and futures. It then shows how a recent option pricing model set out by Dawson et al. (2009) can be used to price nonlinear survivor derivatives, such as survivor swaptions, caps, floors, and combined option products. It concludes by considering applications of these products to a pension fund that wishes to hedge its survivorship risks. [source]