fsolve stopped because the problem appears regular
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Hi,
I am trying to solve a simple problem but somehow stuck with the output:
fsolve stopped because the problem appears regular as measured by the gradient, but the vector of function values is not near zero as measured by the default value of the function tolerance.
Would appreciate some help!
function F = root2d(x)
F(1) = (39*x(1)^2*x(2)^2)/100 - (x(2)^2)/5 - 2*x(1)^2 + 1;
F(2) = (39*x(1)^2*x(2)^2)/100 - (7*x(2)^2)/25 - (14*x(1)^2)/5 + 49/25
And my script says
fun = @root2d;
x0 = [0,0];
x = fsolve(fun,x0)
Thanks a lot in advance!
1 commentaire
XIN
le 24 Sep 2022
No solution found.
fsolve stopped because the problem appears regular as measured by the gradient,
but the vector of function values is not near zero as measured by the
value of the function tolerance.
<stopping criteria details
Question: Why am I having this problem with kmv in matlab? My percentage data are turned into numerical values, but after calculating, my asset value and Equity's value are exactly the same, and the asset value volatility is all 1. I find it so strange.
1、kmvbatch.m
m=xlsread('data1.xlsx',1,'A1:F36')
for i=1:36
r=m(i,4);%
EquityTheta = m(i,1);
E = m(i,2);
D = m(i,3);
T=1;
[Va,AssetTheta] = KMVOptSearch(E,D,r,T,EquityTheta)
m(i,5)=Va;
m(i,6)=AssetTheta;
end
m %
xlswrite('2.csv',m)
2、kmvfun.m
function F=KMVfun(EtoD,r,T,EquityTheta,x)
d1=(log(x(1)*EtoD)+(r+0.5*x(2)^2)*T)/(x(2)*sqrt(T));
d2=d1-x(2)*sqrt(T);
F=[x(1)*normcdf(d1)-exp(-r*T)*normcdf(d2)/EtoD-1;
normcdf(d1)*x(1)*x(2)-EquityTheta];
end
3、kmvoptsearch
function [Va,AssetTheta]=KMVOptSearch(E,D,r,T,EquityTheta)
EtoD=E/D;
x0=[1,1];
VaThetaX=fsolve(@(x)KMVfun(EtoD,r,T,EquityTheta,x),x0);
Va=VaThetaX(1)*E;
AssetTheta=VaThetaX(2);
end
Réponse acceptée
Plus de réponses (1)
Walter Roberson
le 28 Oct 2017
1 vote
Use any starting point whose components have absolute value 1E-7 or higher (approximately).
There are 8 solutions to those equations and your starting point [0 0] is in the middle of all of them; the algorithm cannot figure out which direction to head (the algorithm does not make random choices.) Using a non-zero starting point places one of the solutions closer and allows it to be found.
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