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Accelerated Computations of Sensitivities for xVA

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  • Griselda Deelstra
  • Lech A. Grzelak
  • Felix L. Wolf

Abstract

Exposure simulations are fundamental to many xVA calculations and are a nested expectation problem where repeated portfolio valuations create a significant computational expense. Sensitivity calculations which require shocked and unshocked valuations in bump-and-revalue schemes exacerbate the computational load. A known reduction of the portfolio valuation cost is understood to be found in polynomial approximations, which we apply in this article to interest rate sensitivities of expected exposures. We consider a method based on the approximation of the shocked and unshocked valuation functions, as well as a novel approach in which the difference between these functions is approximated. Convergence results are shown, and we study the choice of interpolation nodes. Numerical experiments with interest rate derivatives are conducted to demonstrate the high accuracy and remarkable computational cost reduction. We further illustrate how the method can be extended to more general xVA models using the example of CVA with wrong-way risk.

Suggested Citation

  • Griselda Deelstra & Lech A. Grzelak & Felix L. Wolf, 2022. "Accelerated Computations of Sensitivities for xVA," Papers 2211.17026, arXiv.org, revised Jan 2024.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2211.17026
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Longstaff, Francis A & Schwartz, Eduardo S, 2001. "Valuing American Options by Simulation: A Simple Least-Squares Approach," The Review of Financial Studies, Society for Financial Studies, vol. 14(1), pages 113-147.
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    Cited by:

    1. Roberto Daluiso & Marco Pinciroli & Michele Trapletti & Edoardo Vittori, 2023. "CVA Hedging by Risk-Averse Stochastic-Horizon Reinforcement Learning," Papers 2312.14044, arXiv.org.

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