Pricing options on securities with discontinuous returns (Q1313131): Difference between revisions

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Latest revision as of 11:34, 22 May 2024

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Pricing options on securities with discontinuous returns
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    Pricing options on securities with discontinuous returns (English)
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    7 July 1994
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    The paper deals with a financial market with \(m+1\) security prices being traded continuously. One security is a risk-free asset. The other \(m\) securities are risky assets, called stocks, subject to the uncertainty in the market. The prices of the stocks are governed by linear stochastic differential equations driven by a multidimensional Brownian motion (representing the continuous flow of information into the market) and a multidimensional point process of random jumps with stochastic intensities (representing sudden shocks). The authors identify an equivalent risk-neutral probability measure (equivalent martingale measure approach), and apply it to the construction of hedging portfolios for European and American contingent claims, so to characterize the evolution of the price of a contingent claim over its lifetime. Finally, a differential-difference equation for the fair price of a derivative security is derived, that can be solved numerically to obtain option prices.
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    European and American options
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    stochastic differential equations
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    Brownian motion
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    multidimensional point process
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    hedging portfolios
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