1998
DOI: 10.3905/jod.6.2.65
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Simulating Path-Dependent Options

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Cited by 24 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…With only 100 time subintervals, the enhanced method is much faster and more accurate than the Monte Carlo method. Beaglehole, Dybvig, and Zhou [1997] and Babsiri and Noel [1998] show that the standard Monte Carlo method is not reliable for pricing barrier options. It is important to adapt it with enhancements based on, for instance, distributions of extreme values.…”
Section: E X H I B I T 4 Double Knock-in Call Prices On Stock-unenhanmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…With only 100 time subintervals, the enhanced method is much faster and more accurate than the Monte Carlo method. Beaglehole, Dybvig, and Zhou [1997] and Babsiri and Noel [1998] show that the standard Monte Carlo method is not reliable for pricing barrier options. It is important to adapt it with enhancements based on, for instance, distributions of extreme values.…”
Section: E X H I B I T 4 Double Knock-in Call Prices On Stock-unenhanmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Beaglehole, Dybvig, and Zhou [1997] describe a Monte Carlo method for barrier options that draws random numbers from the distribution for maximum (minimum) of a Brownian bridge. Babsiri and Noel [1998] simulate the terminal value of the underlying stock price and use the cumulative distribution function for the extreme of the logarithmic price conditional on the terminal price to draw random values of the extremes. Both these articles show that the use of distributional information improves the accuracy of Monte Carlo methods in pricing barrier options.…”
Section: The Pricing Of Barrier Optionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A barrier option is cheaper than its underlying plain-vanilla option because the payoff of the barrier option is less than or equal to that of the plain-vanilla option. Barrier options have been considered by Reiner and Rubinstein (1991), Heynen and Kat (1994b), Nelken (1996), Lin (1998), El Babsiri andNoel (1998), Zhang (1998) and Kwok (1998). To increase the participation rate, let us now apply an up-and-in barrier option to new EIAs as an alternative to point-to-point EIAs.…”
Section: Up-and-in Barrier Eiamentioning
confidence: 98%
“…There are variations on these options which are used in practice whose pricing can be easily accommodated by the methods used here. A hotdog option (see Babsiri and Noel (1998)), is a double knock-out barrier option whose barriers are time dependent. We extend their methods to more general price processes using pathwise imputation.…”
Section: Pricing Path Dependent Optionsmentioning
confidence: 99%