CHAPTER 9
Bermudan-Style Options
A prominent class of derivatives is the class of American-style exercise options, in which the owner of the option has flexibility in choosing the time to exercise. A true American-style option allows the owner to exercise the option over any time during the exercise window. In interest-rate derivatives, true American-style options are rare, and the flexible-exercise feature is limited to a finite number of dates, typically reset/coupon dates (quarterly, semiannual) of the underlying instrument (bond, swap, . . . ), for example, a 30-year callable bond, callable at par after 10 years, and semiannually thereafter. This class of interest-rate options is known as Bermudan-style options.
The general pricing framework for Bermudan-style options is still risk-neutral valuation with t-prices provided as
(0 ≤ tT) C(t, ω) =332ω)]
but augmented to include the owner′s option to choose the exercise time. The fixed exercise date T = te is replaced by a random exercise time chosen by the owner, T(ω). The exercise-time decision can be any rule/strategy chosen by the owner, and can depend on the current and history of the asset evolution, but not on the future, that is, it should be non-anticipative. In probability theory, the technical term for a nonanticipative strategy is a stopping time.
Given such a nonanticipative exercise strategy T(·), we evaluate the ...

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