Publication Type

Working Paper

Version

publishedVersion

Publication Date

10-2010

Abstract

This paper overviews some recent advances on simulatio n-based methods of estimating time series models and asset pricing models that are widely used in finance. The simulation based methods have proven to be particularly useful when the likelihood function and moments do not have tractable forms and hence the maximum likelihood method (MLE) and the generalized method of moments (GMM) are difficult to use. They can also be useful for improving the finite sample performance of the traditional methods when financial time series are highly persistent and when the quantity of interest is a highly nonlinear function of system parameters.The simulation-based methods are classified in this paper, based on the frequentist/Bayesian split. Frequentist’s simulation-based methods cover simulated generalized method of moments (SMM), efficient method of moments (EMM), indirect inference (II), various forms of simulated maximum likelihood methods (SMLE). Asymptotic properties of these methods are discussed and asymptotic efficiency is compared. Bayesian simulation-based methods cover various MCMC algorithms. Each simulation-based method is discussed in the context of a specific financial time series model as a motivating example. The list of discussed financial time series models cover continuous time diffusion models, latent variable models, term structure models, asset pricing models, and structural models for credit risk.Finite sample problems of the exact maximum likelihood method, such as finite sample bias, are also discussed. Simulation-based bias correction methods, such as indirect inference, simulation-based median unbiased estimation, and bootstrap methods are reviewed. A nice property about these simulation-based bias correction methods is that they retains the good asymptotic properties of maximum likelihood estimation while reducing finite sample bias.Empirical applications, based on real exchange rates, interest rates and equity data, illustrate how to implement the simulation based methods. In particular, we apply EMM to estimate a continuous time stochastic volatility model, MCMC to a structural model for credit risk, SMLE to a discrete time stochastic volatility model, II method to the Black-Scholes option pricing model, median unbiased estimation method to a one-factor bond option pricing model. Computer code and data are provided.

Keywords

Generalized method of moments, Maximum likelihood, MCMC, Indirect Inference, Bootstrap, Median Unbiased, Option pricing, Credit risk, Stock price, Exchange rate, Interestrate

Discipline

Econometrics | Economic Theory

Research Areas

Econometrics

First Page

1

Last Page

27

Publisher

SMU Economics and Statistics Working Paper Series, No. 19-2010

City or Country

Singapore

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Comments

Published in Handbook of computational finance, 2010, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-17254-0_15

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