characteristic function
High-Resolution Tensor-Network Fourier Methods for Exponentially Compressed Non-Gaussian Aggregate Distributions
Rodríguez-Aldavero, Juan José, García-Ripoll, Juan José
Its low-rank QTT structure arises from intrinsic spectral smoothness in continuous models, or from spectral energy concentration as the number of components D grows in discrete models. We demonstrate this on weighted sums of Bernoulli and lognormal random variables. In the latter, the approach reaches high-resolution discretizations of N = 230 frequency modes on standard hardware, far beyond the N =224 ceiling of dense implementations. These compressed representations enable efficient computation of Value at Risk (VaR) and Expected Shortfall (ES), supporting applications in quantitative finance and beyond. I. INTRODUCTION Weighted sums of independent random variables constitute a basic probabilistic model, describing macroscopic behavior arising from the aggregation of microscopic stochastic components. These models arise in a wide range of applications. Their probability distribution generally lacks a closed-form expression, and their evaluation involves multidimensional convolution integrals that are susceptible to the curse of dimensionality. Consequently, evaluating these models relies on specializednumericalmethods. Whilethese methods have been adapted for discrete settings [18, 19], they are frequently hampered by persistent Gibbs oscillations, which arise from distributional discontinuities and preclude uniform convergence [20, 21]. No existing method simultaneously achieves an accurate approximation of the exact, fully non-Gaussian target distribution while remaining scalable to larger, practically relevant system sizes. In this work, we introduce a new algorithm that combines the Fourier spectral method with tensor-network techniques.
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8 Supplementary Material 8.1 Details and Proofs for the Proposed EOC 8.1.1 Calculation of T Given data D
Fourier transform of a power of a Euclidean distance, i.e., According to Jensen's inequality and Lipschitzness assumption, we have X According to the law of total probability and Theorem 4.1, we have P { Y A feasible solution to Equation (1) can be quickly found. Pseudocode for Algorithm 2 The pseudocode for the constrained optimization is detailed in Algorithm 2. 18 Algorithm 2 Robust Optimization Method with EOC Constraint Input: Initiate Array A of shape 2 A M that stores the max possible step. Our proposed algorithm is highly computationally efficient.
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