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The Mathematics of Arbitrage
Freddy Delbaen Walter Schachermayer
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Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2006 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-21992-7
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-31299-4
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2006
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer Berlin Heidelberg 2006
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
The Story in a Nutshell
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
The notion of arbitrage is crucial to the modern theory of Finance. It is the corner-stone of the option pricing theory due to F. Black, R. Merton and M. Scholes [BS 73], [M 73] (published in 1973, honoured by the Nobel prize in Economics 1997).
Part I - A Guided Tour to Arbitrage Theory | Pp. 3-9
Models of Financial Markets on Finite Probability Spaces
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
In this section we shall develop the theory of pricing and hedging of derivative securities in financial markets.
Part I - A Guided Tour to Arbitrage Theory | Pp. 11-32
Utility Maximisation on Finite Probability Spaces
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
In addition to the model of a financial market, we now consider a function (), modelling the utility of an agent’s wealth at the terminal time .
Part I - A Guided Tour to Arbitrage Theory | Pp. 33-56
Bachelier and Black-Scholes
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
In this chapter we illustrate the theory developed in the previous chapters by analyzing the most basic examples in continuous time. They still play an important role in practice.
Part I - A Guided Tour to Arbitrage Theory | Pp. 57-69
The Kreps-Yan Theorem
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
Let us turn back to the no-arbitrage theory developed in Chap. 2 to raise again the question: what can we deduce from applying the no-arbitrage principle with respect to pricing and hedging of derivative securities?
Part I - A Guided Tour to Arbitrage Theory | Pp. 71-83
The Dalang-Morton-Willinger Theorem
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
In Chap. 2 we only dealt with finite probability spaces. This was mainly done because of technical difficulties. As soon as the probability space (,ℱ,) is no longer finite, the corresponding function spaces such as (,ℱ,) or (,ℱ,) are infinite dimensional and we have to fall back on functional analysis. In this chapter we will present a proof of the Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing, Theorem 2.2.7, in the case of general (,ℱ,), but still in finite discrete time. Since discounting does not present any difficulty, we will suppose that the -dimensional price process has already been discounted as in Sect. 2.1. Also the notion of the class ℋ of trading strategies does not present any difficulties and we may adopt Definition 2.1.4 verbatim also for general (,ℱ,) as long as we are working in finite discrete time. In this setting we can state the following beautiful version of the Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing, due to Dalang, Morton and Willinger [DMW 90].
Part I - A Guided Tour to Arbitrage Theory | Pp. 85-109
A Primer in Stochastic Integration
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
In the previous chapters we mainly developed the arbitrage theory for models in finite discrete time. In the setting of the previous chapter, where the probability space was not finite, several features of infinite dimensional functional analysis played a role. When trading takes place in continuous time the difficulties increase even more. It is here that we need the full power of stochastic integration theory. Before giving precise definitions, let us give a short overview of the different models and of their mutual relation.
Part I - A Guided Tour to Arbitrage Theory | Pp. 111-128
Arbitrage Theory in Continuous Time: an Overview
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
After all this preliminary work we are finally in a position to tackle the theme of no-arbitrage in full generality, i.e., for general models of financial markets in continuous time, and for general (i.e., not necessarily simple) trading strategies . The choice of the proper class of trading strategies will turn out to be rather subtle. In fact, for different applications (e.g., portfolio optimisation with respect to exponential utility to give a concrete example; see [DGRSSS 02] and [S 03a]) it will sometimes be necessary to consider different classes of appropriate trading strategies. But for the present purpose the concept of strategies developed below will serve very well.
Part I - A Guided Tour to Arbitrage Theory | Pp. 129-146
A General Version of the Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing (1994)
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
A basic result in mathematical finance, sometimes called the (see [DR 87]), is that for a stochastic process , the existence of an equivalent martingale measure is equivalent to the absence of arbitrage opportunities. In finance the process describes the random evolution of the discounted price of one or several financial assets. The equivalence of no-arbitrage with the existence of an equivalent probability martingale measure is at the basis of the entire theory of “pricing by arbitrage”. Starting from the economically meaningful assumption that does not allow arbitrage profits (different variants of this concept will be defined below), the theorem allows the probability on the underlying probability space (,ℱ,) to be replaced by an equivalent measure such that the process becomes a martingale under the new measure. This makes it possible to use the rich machinery of martingale theory. In particular the problem of fair pricing of contingent claims is reduced to taking expected values with respect to the measure . This method of pricing contingent claims is known to actuaries since the introduction of actuarial skills, centuries ago and known by the name of “equivalence principle”.
Part II - The Original Papers | Pp. 149-205
A Simple Counter-Example to Several Problems in the Theory of Asset Pricing (1998)
Freddy Delbaen; Walter Schachermayer
We give an easy example of two strictly positive local martingales which fail to be uniformly integrable, but such that their product is a uniformly integrable martingale. The example simplifies an earlier example given by the second author. We give applications in Mathematical Finance and we show that the phenomenon is present in many incomplete markets.
Part II - The Original Papers | Pp. 207-216