- Joined
- 10/31/17
- Messages
- 2
- Points
- 11
Hi,
Good morning.
I came to this wonderful forum after watching MIT 18.S096 Topics in Mathematics with Applications in Finance, Fall 2013- lecture 7 VAR by Kenneth Abbott.
I am trying to model mortgage portfolio behavior in the Israeli market.
A mortgage portfolio is built from different loans. Each loan's monthly payment, interest and principal is dynamic and depends on different indicators which are:
Consumer pricing index, Israeli government bond rates etc..
Following Ken's lecture, I obtained a correlated synthesized spreadsheet using the time series data of the last 10 years.
Now, I want to check extreme scenarios. For example how the Israeli government bond rate will change from a steep incline of inflation rate.
Therefore, I want to simulate a synthesized time series with a predefined consumer index and get the correlated bond rate with respect to that.
Any Idea how this can be done?
From portfolio management point of view, is this the right thing to do (As I am trying to assess the risk 20 years from now to a mortgage given today )?
Thank you for your comments,
Eyal
Good morning.
I came to this wonderful forum after watching MIT 18.S096 Topics in Mathematics with Applications in Finance, Fall 2013- lecture 7 VAR by Kenneth Abbott.
I am trying to model mortgage portfolio behavior in the Israeli market.
A mortgage portfolio is built from different loans. Each loan's monthly payment, interest and principal is dynamic and depends on different indicators which are:
Consumer pricing index, Israeli government bond rates etc..
Following Ken's lecture, I obtained a correlated synthesized spreadsheet using the time series data of the last 10 years.
Now, I want to check extreme scenarios. For example how the Israeli government bond rate will change from a steep incline of inflation rate.
Therefore, I want to simulate a synthesized time series with a predefined consumer index and get the correlated bond rate with respect to that.
Any Idea how this can be done?
From portfolio management point of view, is this the right thing to do (As I am trying to assess the risk 20 years from now to a mortgage given today )?
Thank you for your comments,
Eyal