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Copulas and Applications

Simulating from Exchangeable Archimedean Copulas

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Pages 1019-1034 | Received 28 Oct 2006, Accepted 09 Dec 2006, Published online: 28 Aug 2007
 

Abstract

Multivariate exchangeable Archimedean copulas are one of the most popular classes of copulas that are used in actuarial science and finance for modeling risk dependencies and for using them to quantify the magnitude of tail dependence. Owing to the increase in popularity of copulas to measure dependent risks, generating from multivariate copulas has become a very crucial exercise. Current methods for generating from multivariate Archimedean copulas could become a very difficult task as the number of dimension increases. The resulting analytical procedures suggested in the existing literature do not offer much guidance for practical implementation. This article presents an algorithm for generating values from the multivariate exchangeable Archimedean copulas based on a multivariate extension of a bivariate result. A procedure for generating values from bivariate Archimedean copulas has been originally proposed in Genest and Rivest (Citation1993) and again later described in Nelsen (Citation1999) and Embrechts et al. (Citation2001a Citationb). Using a proof that is simply based on fundamental Jacobian techniques for deriving distributions of transformed random variables, we are able to extend the bivariate result into the multivariate case allowing us to develop an interesting algorithm to generate values from exchangeable Archimedean copulas. As auxiliary results, we are able to derive the distribution function of an n-dimensional Archimedean copula, a result already known in Genest and Rivest (Citation2001), but our approach of proving this result is based on a different perspective. This article focuses on this class of copulas that has one generating function and one parameter that characterizes the dependence structure of the joint distribution function.

Mathematics Subject Classification:

Acknowledgments

We wish to acknowledge financial support provided by the Australian Research Council through the Discovery Grant DP0345036 “Pricing, Solvency and Capital Management in Insurance: New Perspectives from the Integration of Actuarial and Financial Economic Theory”, and the UNSW Actuarial Foundation of the Institute of Actuaries of Australia. We also thank the referee for the comments that helped improve the article.

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