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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

Statistical analysis and simulation methods related to load-sharing models.

Rydén, Patrik January 2000 (has links)
We consider the problem of estimating the reliability of bundles constructed of several fibres, given a particular kind of censored data. The bundles consist of several fibres which have their own independent identically dis-tributed failure stresses (i.e.the forces that destroy the fibres). The force applied to a bundle is distributed between the fibres in the bundle, accord-ing to a load-sharing model. A bundle with these properties is an example of a load-sharing system. Ropes constructed of twisted threads, compos-ite materials constructed of parallel carbon fibres, and suspension cables constructed of steel wires are all examples of load-sharing systems. In par-ticular, we consider bundles where load-sharing is described by either the Equal load-sharing model or the more general Local load-sharing model. In order to estimate the cumulative distribution function of failure stresses of bundles, we need some observed data. This data is obtained either by testing bundles or by testing individual fibres. In this thesis, we develop several theoretical testing methods for both fibres and bundles, and related methods of statistical inference. Non-parametric and parametric estimators of the cumulative distribu-tion functions of failure stresses of fibres and bundles are obtained from different kinds of observed data. It is proved that most of these estimators are consistent, and that some are strongly consistent estimators. We show that resampling, in this case random sampling with replacement from sta-tistically independent portions of data, can be used to assess the accuracy of these estimators. Several numerical examples illustrate the behavior of the obtained estimators. These examples suggest that the obtained estimators usually perform well when the number of observations is moderate.
52

A model for managing pension funds with benchmarking in an inflationary market

Nsuami, Mozart January 2011 (has links)
Magister Scientiae - MSc / Aggressive fiscal and monetary policies by governments of countries and central banks in developed markets could somehow push inflation to some very high level in the long run. Due to the decreasing of pension fund benefits and increasing inflation rate, pension companies are selling inflation-linked products to hedge against inflation risk. Such companies are seriously considering the possible effects of inflation volatility on their investment, and some of them tend to include inflationary allowances in the pension payment plan. In this dissertation we study the management of pension funds of the defined contribution type in the presence of inflation-recession. We study how the fund manager maximizes his fund's wealth when the salaries and stocks are affected by inflation. In this regard, we consider the case of a pension company which invests in a stock, inflation-linked bonds and a money market account, while basing its investment on the contribution of the plan member. We use a benchmarking approach and martingale methods to compute an optimal strategy which maximizes the fund wealth. / South Africa
53

Abordagem de martingais para análise assintótica do passeio aleatório do elefante / Martingale approach for asymptotic analysis of elephant random walk

Milton Miranda Neto 20 August 2018 (has links)
Neste trabalho, estudamos o passeio aleatório do elefante introduzido em (SCHUTZ; TRIMPER, 2004). Um processo estocástico não Markoviano com memória de alcance ilimitada que apresenta transição de fase. Nosso objetivo é demonstrar a convergência quase certa do passeio aleatório do elefante nos casos subcrítico e crítico. Além destes resultado, também apresentamos a demonstração do Teorema Central do Limite para ambos os regimes. Para o caso supercrítico, vamos demonstrar a convergência do passeio aleatório do elefante para uma variável aleatória não normal com base nos artigos (BAUR; BERTOIN, 2016), (BERCU, 2018) e (COLETTI; GAVA; SCHUTZ, 2017b). / In this work we study the elephant random walk introduced in (SCHUTZ; TRIMPER, 2004), a discrete time, non-Markovian stochastic process with unlimited range memory that presents phase transition. Our objective is to proof the almost sure convergence for the subcritical and critical regimes of the model. We also present a demonstration of the Central Limit Theorem for both regimes. For the supercritical regime we proof the convergence of the elephant random walk to a non-normal random variable based on the articles (BAUR; BERTOIN, 2016), (BERCU, 2018) and (COLETTI; GAVA; SCHUTZ, 2017b).
54

Tržně konzistentní oceňování závazků pojišťovny / Market consistent valuation of insurance liabilities

Šindelář, Jakub January 2015 (has links)
Market-consistent actuarial valuation of insurance liabilities is important approach not only for regulatory framework Solvency II but also generally for financial and actuarial modeling in insurance companies. It is the reason why we will focus on derivation of basic theory for valuation of cash flow from insurance liabilities by real world probability measure with deflators and risk neutral measure with bank account numeraire (also called equivalent martingale measure). We will show on illustrative examples ekvivalence of both approaches. Further, we will focus on spot rate modeling using discrete time Vasicek model. We use discrete time Vasicek model in Valuation Portfolio theory, where we are trying to replicate insurance liabilities by financial instruments. In theory and also example we use important assumption about independent decoupling of financial events and insurance technical events for theirs modeling.
55

Optimal investment under behavioural criteria in incomplete markets

Rodriguez Villarreal, José Gregorio January 2015 (has links)
In this thesis a mathematical description and analysis of the Cumulative Prospect Theory is presented. Conditions that ensure well-posedness of the problem are provided, as well as existence results concerning optimal policies for discrete-time incomplete market models and for a family of diffusion market models. A brief outline of how this work is organised follows. In Chapter 2 important results on weak convergence and discrete time finance models are described, these facts form the main background to introduce in Chapter 3 the problem of optimal investment under the CPT theorem in a discrete time setting. We describe our model, present some assumptions and main results are derived. The second part of this work comprises the description of the martingale problem formulation of diffusion processes in Chapter 4. A key result on the limits and topological properties of the set of laws of a class of Itô processes is described in Chapter 5. Finally, we introduce a factor model that includes a class of stochastic volatility models, possibly with path-depending coefficients. Under this model, the problem of optimal investment with a behavioural investor is analysed and our main results on well-posedness and existence of optimal strategies are described under the framework of weak solutions. Further research and challenges when applying the techniques developed in this work are described.
56

Limit Theorems for Random Fields

Zhang, Na 18 October 2019 (has links)
No description available.
57

Optimal consumption--investment problems under time-varying incomplete preferences

Xia, Weixuan 12 May 2023 (has links)
The main objective of this thesis is to develop a martingale-type solution to optimal consumption--investment choice problems ([Merton, 1969] and [Merton, 1971]) under time-varying incomplete preferences driven by externalities such as patience, socialization effects, and market volatility. The market is composed of multiple risky assets and multiple consumption goods, while in addition there are multiple fluctuating preference parameters with inexact values connected to imprecise tastes. Utility maximization becomes a multi-criteria problem with possibly function-valued criteria. To come up with a complete characterization of the solutions, first we motivate and introduce a set-valued stochastic process for the dynamics of multi-utility indices and formulate the optimization problem in a topological vector space. Then, we modify a classical scalarization method allowing for infiniteness and randomness in dimensions and prove results of equivalence to the original problem. Illustrative examples are given to demonstrate practical interests and method applicability progressively. The link between the original problem and a dual problem is also discussed, relatively briefly. Finally, by using Malliavin calculus with stochastic geometry, we find optimal investment policies to be generally set-valued, each of whose selectors admits a four-way decomposition involving an additional indecisiveness risk-hedging portfolio. Our results touch on new directions for optimal consumption--investment choices in the presence of incomparability and time inconsistency, also signaling potentially testable assumptions on the variability of asset prices. Simulation techniques for set-valued processes are studied for how solved optimal policies can be computed in practice. / 2025-05-12T00:00:00Z
58

Game-Theoretic Approach to Thermodynamics / 熱力学へのゲーム論的アプローチ

Hiura, Ken 23 March 2022 (has links)
京都大学 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(理学) / 甲第23691号 / 理博第4781号 / 新制||理||1684(附属図書館) / 京都大学大学院理学研究科物理学・宇宙物理学専攻 / (主査)教授 佐々 真一, 准教授 武末 真二, 講師 DECHANT Andreas / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Science / Kyoto University / DFAM
59

Les processus additifs markoviens et leurs applications en finance mathématique

Momeya Ouabo, Romuald Hervé 05 1900 (has links)
Cette thèse porte sur les questions d'évaluation et de couverture des options dans un modèle exponentiel-Lévy avec changements de régime. Un tel modèle est construit sur un processus additif markovien un peu comme le modèle de Black- Scholes est basé sur un mouvement Brownien. Du fait de l'existence de plusieurs sources d'aléa, nous sommes en présence d'un marché incomplet et ce fait rend inopérant les développements théoriques initiés par Black et Scholes et Merton dans le cadre d'un marché complet. Nous montrons dans cette thèse que l'utilisation de certains résultats de la théorie des processus additifs markoviens permet d'apporter des solutions aux problèmes d'évaluation et de couverture des options. Notamment, nous arrivons à caracté- riser la mesure martingale qui minimise l'entropie relative à la mesure de probabilit é historique ; aussi nous dérivons explicitement sous certaines conditions, le portefeuille optimal qui permet à un agent de minimiser localement le risque quadratique associé. Par ailleurs, dans une perspective plus pratique nous caract érisons le prix d'une option Européenne comme l'unique solution de viscosité d'un système d'équations intégro-di érentielles non-linéaires. Il s'agit là d'un premier pas pour la construction des schémas numériques pour approcher ledit prix. / This thesis focuses on the pricing and hedging problems of financial derivatives in a Markov-modulated exponential-Lévy model. Such model is built on a Markov additive process as much as the Black-Scholes model is based on Brownian motion. Since there exist many sources of randomness, we are dealing with an incomplete market and this makes inoperative techniques initiated by Black, Scholes and Merton in the context of a complete market. We show that, by using some results of the theory of Markov additive processes it is possible to provide solutions to the previous problems. In particular, we characterize the martingale measure which minimizes the relative entropy with respect to the physical probability measure. Also under some conditions, we derive explicitly the optimal portfolio which allows an agent to minimize the local quadratic risk associated. Furthermore, in a more practical perspective we characterize the price of a European type option as the unique viscosity solution of a system of nonlinear integro-di erential equations. This is a rst step towards the construction of e ective numerical schemes to approximate options price.
60

Trois essais en finance de marché / Three essays in finance of markets

Tavin, Bertrand 07 November 2013 (has links)
Le but de cette thèse est l'étude de certains aspects d'un marché financier comportant plusieurs actifs risqués et des options écrites sur ces actifs. Dans un premier essai, nous proposons une expression de la distribution implicite du prix d'un actif sous-jacent en fonction du smile de volatilité associé aux options écrites sur cet actif. L'expression obtenue pour la densité implicite prend la forme d'une densité log-normale plus deux termes d'ajustement. La mise en œuvre de ce résultat est ensuite illustrée à travers deux applications pratiques. Dans le deuxième essai, nous obtenons deux caractérisations de l'absence d'opportunité d'arbitrage en termes de fonctions copules. Chacune de ces caractérisations conduit à une méthode de détection des situations d'arbitrage. La première méthode proposée repose sur une propriété particulière des copules de Bernstein. La seconde méthode est valable dans le cas bivarié et tire profit de résultats sur les bornes de Fréchet-Hoeffding en présence d'information additionnelle sur la dépendance. Les résultats de l'utilisation de ces méthodes sur des données empiriques sont présentés. Enfin, dans le troisième essai, nous proposons une approche pour couvrir avec des options sur spread l'exposition au risque de dépendance d'un portefeuille d'options écrites sur deux actifs. L'approche proposée repose sur l'utilisation de deux modèles paramétriques de dépendance que nous introduisons: les copules Power Frank (PF) et Power Student's t (PST). Le fonctionnement et les résultats de l'approche proposée sont illustrés dans une étude numérique. / This thesis is dedicated to the study of a market with several risky assets and options written on these assets. In a first essay, we express the implied distribution of an underlying asset price as a function of its options implied volatility smile. For the density, the obtained expression has the form of a log-normal density plus two adjustment terms. We then explain how to use these results and develop practical applications. In a first application we value a portfolio of digital options and in another application we fit a parametric distribution. In the second essay, we propose a twofold characterization of the absence of arbitrage opportunity in terms of copula functions. We then propose two detection methods. The first method relies on a particular property of Bernstein copulas. The second method, valid only in the case of a market with two risky assets, is based upon results on improved Fréchet-Hoeffding bounds in presence of additional information about the dependence. We also present results obtained with the proposed methods applied to empirical data. Finally, in the third essay, we develop an approach to hedge, with spread options, an exposure to dependence risk for a portfolio comprising two-asset options. The approach we propose is based on two parametric models of dependence that we introduce. These dependence models are copulas functions named Power Frank (PF) and Power Student's t (PST). The results obtained with the proposed approach are detailed in a numerical study.

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