2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbankfin.2013.09.007
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Valuation of insurers’ contingent capital with counterparty risk and price endogeneity

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Cited by 25 publications
(9 citation statements)
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References 30 publications
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“…The scenario analysis shows that MMPP generates lower pricing errors than the PP and can reduce pricing errors by 30-66%. Lo et al (2013) develop a structural framework for CAT equity put options to recognize counterparty risk and overcome the problem of price endogeneity in the valuation model. Considering price endogeneity can significantly resolve the underestimation problem of option prices, CAT equity put prices will be substantially overestimated without recognizing counterparty risk.…”
Section: Cat Equity Put Optionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…The scenario analysis shows that MMPP generates lower pricing errors than the PP and can reduce pricing errors by 30-66%. Lo et al (2013) develop a structural framework for CAT equity put options to recognize counterparty risk and overcome the problem of price endogeneity in the valuation model. Considering price endogeneity can significantly resolve the underestimation problem of option prices, CAT equity put prices will be substantially overestimated without recognizing counterparty risk.…”
Section: Cat Equity Put Optionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this section, we follow the works of Yu (2002, 2007), Lo et al (2013) and Lo et al (2020) to illustrate the framework and procedures in pricing CAT-linked securities under Merton's structural framework. In addition to deriving the values of CAT-linked securities, this approach can explicitly investigate how the (re)insurer's financial position and debt structure affect values of these securities.…”
Section: Valuation Of Catastrophe-linked Securitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This shortcoming is particularly important for modeling a mortgage insurer's liability value, because falling house prices and rising interest rates are the precipitating factors for the catastrophic nature of MI. Following Duan et al (1995), Duan and Yu (2005), Chang et al (2012a), and Lo et al (2013), we model the mortgage insurer's total liability value as consisting of two other risk components: interest rate and housing price, which are captured by the Wiener component of the interest rate and the Wiener component and compound Poisson component of housing price processes, respectively. Hence, the liability value of the mortgage insurer is governed by the following process 9 :…”
Section: The Mortgage Insurer's Liability Processmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based only on CAT loss data, insurance economists employ a pure Poisson process to describe the frequency of CAT events to price CAT insurance products (e.g., Chang, Chang, and Yu, ; Lee and Yu, , ; Lo, Lee, and Yu, ). Lin, Chang, and Powers () point out that the deterministic frequency parameter of the Poisson process is inadequate for CAT events and propose a doubly stochastic Poisson process for a frequency parameter of CAT events.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%