Leonardo Perotti
Rabobank and Utrecht University
Modeling and Replication of the Prepayment Option of Mortgages including Behavioral Uncertainty
Prepayment risk embedded in fixed-rate mortgages forms a significant fraction of a financial institution’s exposure, and it receives particular attention because of the magnitude of the underlying market. The embedded prepayment option (EPO) bears the same interest rate risk as an exotic interest rate swap (IRS) with a suitable stochastic notional. We investigate the effect of relaxing the assumption of a deterministic relationship between the market interest rate incentive and the prepayment rate. A non-hedgeable risk factor is modeled to capture the uncertainty in mortgage owners’ behavior, leading to an incomplete market. We prove under natural assumptions that including behavioral uncertainty reduces the exposure’s value. We statically replicate the exposure resulting from the EPO with IRSs and swaptions, and we show that a replication based on swaps solely cannot easily control the right tail of the exposure distribution, while including swaptions enables that. The replication framework is flexible and focuses on different regions in the exposure distribution. Since a non-hedgeable risk factor entails the existence of multiple equivalent martingale measures, pricing and optimal replication are not unique. We investigate the effect of a market price of risk misspecification and we provide a methodology to generate robust hedging strategies. Such strategies, obtained as solutions to a saddle-point problem, allow us to bound the exposure against a misspecification of the pricing measure.
After earning a Bachelor’s degree in Mathematics and a Master’s in Mathematical Engineering, Leonardo is now a PhD candidate at the Mathematical Institute of Utrecht University, in collaboration with Rabobank. Under the supervision of prof. Cornelis (Kees) Oosterlee and dr. ir. Lech Grzelak, his research focuses on modelling risks associated with fixed interest rate mortgages, with a particular emphasis on “prepayment risk” and its behavioural component.