Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/8206
Title: High performance Monte Carlo computation for finance risk data analysis
Authors: Zhao, Yu
Advisors: Li, M
Keywords: Value at risk;Parallelizing;Mapreduce model;Hadoop;Data locality
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Brunel University School of Engineering and Design PhD Theses
Abstract: Finance risk management has been playing an increasingly important role in the finance sector, to analyse finance data and to prevent any potential crisis. It has been widely recognised that Value at Risk (VaR) is an effective method for finance risk management and evaluation. This thesis conducts a comprehensive review on a number of VaR methods and discusses in depth their strengths and limitations. Among these VaR methods, Monte Carlo simulation and analysis has proven to be the most accurate VaR method in finance risk evaluation due to its strong modelling capabilities. However, one major challenge in Monte Carlo analysis is its high computing complexity of O(n²). To speed up the computation in Monte Carlo analysis, this thesis parallelises Monte Carlo using the MapReduce model, which has become a major software programming model in support of data intensive applications. MapReduce consists of two functions - Map and Reduce. The Map function segments a large data set into small data chunks and distribute these data chunks among a number of computers for processing in parallel with a Mapper processing a data chunk on a computing node. The Reduce function collects the results generated by these Map nodes (Mappers) and generates an output. The parallel Monte Carlo is evaluated initially in a small scale MapReduce experimental environment, and subsequently evaluated in a large scale simulation environment. Both experimental and simulation results show that the MapReduce based parallel Monte Carlo is greatly faster than the sequential Monte Carlo in computation, and the accuracy level is maintained as well. In data intensive applications, moving huge volumes of data among the computing nodes could incur high overhead in communication. To address this issue, this thesis further considers data locality in the MapReduce based parallel Monte Carlo, and evaluates the impacts of data locality on the performance in computation.
Description: This thesis was submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy and awarded by Brunel University.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/8206
Appears in Collections:Electronic and Computer Engineering
Dept of Electronic and Electrical Engineering Theses

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