Vibrato and automatic differentiation for high order derivatives and sensitivities of financial options
Gilles Pag\`es (UPMC), Olivier Pironneau (LJLL), Guillaume Sall (LJLL)

TL;DR
This paper introduces a combined Vibrato and automatic differentiation method for efficiently computing high-order derivatives of financial options, demonstrating improved speed, stability, and generality over existing techniques across various financial models.
Contribution
It presents a novel framework combining Vibrato and automatic differentiation for calculating high-order greeks, applicable to diverse financial derivatives and models, including American options and stochastic volatility.
Findings
Faster computation than finite difference methods.
More stable than automatic differentiation for second derivatives.
Applicable to a wide range of financial instruments and models.
Abstract
This paper deals with the computation of second or higher order greeks of financial securities. It combines two methods, Vibrato and automatic differentiation and compares with other methods. We show that this combined technique is faster than standard finite difference, more stable than automatic differentiation of second order derivatives and more general than Malliavin Calculus. We present a generic framework to compute any greeks and present several applications on different types of financial contracts: European and American options, multidimensional Basket Call and stochastic volatility models such as Heston's model. We give also an algorithm to compute derivatives for the Longstaff-Schwartz Monte Carlo method for American options. We also extend automatic differentiation for second order derivatives of options with non-twice differentiable payoff. 1. Introduction. Due to BASEL…
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