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1999 | Buch

Mathematics of Financial Markets

verfasst von: Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp

Verlag: Springer New York

Buchreihe : Springer Finance

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Über dieses Buch

This work is aimed at an audience with asound mathematical background wishing to leam about the rapidly expanding field of mathematical finance. Its content is suitable particularly for graduate students in mathematics who have a background in measure theory and prob ability. The emphasis throughout is on developing the mathematical concepts re­ quired for the theory within the context of their application. No attempt is made to cover the bewildering variety of novel (or 'exotic') financial instru­ ments that now appear on the derivatives markets; the focus throughout remains on a rigorous development of the more basic options that lie at the heart of the remarkable range of current applications of martingale theory to financial markets. The first five chapters present the theory in a discrete-time framework. Stochastic calculus is not required, and this material should be accessible to anyone familiar with elementary probability theory and linear algebra. The basic idea of pricing by arbitrage (or, rather, by nonarbitrage) is presented in Chapter 1. The unique price for a European option in a single­ period binomial model is given and then extended to multi-period binomial models. Chapter 2 intro duces the idea of a martingale measure for price pro­ cesses. Following a discussion of the use of self-financing trading strategies to hedge against trading risk, it is shown how options can be priced using an equivalent measure for which the discounted price process is a mar­ tingale.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. Pricing by Arbitrage
Abstract
The ‘unreasonable effectiveness’ of mathematics is evidenced by the frequency with which mathematical techniques that were developed without thought for practical applications find unexpected new domains of applicability in various spheres of life. This phenomenon has customarily been observed in the physical sciences; in the social sciences its impact has perhaps been less evident. One of the more remarkable examples of simultaneous revolutions in economic theory and market practice is provided by the opening of the world’s first options exchange in Chicago in 1973, and the ground-breaking theoretical papers on preference-free option pricing by Black and Scholes [18] (quickly extended by Merton [188]) which appeared in the same year, thus providing a workable model for the ‘rational’ market pricing of traded options.
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
2. Martingale Measures
Abstract
Fix a time set 𝕋 = {0,1,2,... , T}, where the trading horizon T is treated as the terminal date of the economic activity being modelled, and the points of 𝕋 are the admissible trading dates. We assume given a fixed probability space (Ω, F, P) to model all ‘possible states of the market’.
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
3. The Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing
Abstract
We saw in the previous chapter that the existence of a probability measure Q ~ P under which the (discounted) stock price process is a martingale is sufficient to ensure that the market model is viable; that is, it contains no arbitrage opportunities. We now address the converse: whether for every viable model one can construct an equivalent martingale measure for S, so that the price of a contingent claim can be found as an expectation relative to Q.
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
4. Complete Markets and Martingale Representation
Abstract
Our objective in this chapter is to study completeness of the market model. We continue to restrict attention to finite market models: although our initial results can be stated in a more general framework, the proofs we give rely heavily on the finite nature of the model, and we show in the later sections that completeness depends strongly on the fine structure of the filtrat ions, a feature that is not easily formulated for more general models.
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
5. Stopping Times and American Options
Abstract
American options differ fundamentally from their European counterparts, since the exercise date is now at the holder’s disposal, and not fixed in advance. The only constraint is that the option ceases to be valid at time T and thus cannot be exercised after the expiry date T.
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
6. A Review of Continuous-Time Stochastic Calculus
Abstract
In this and the succeeding chapters the time parameter takes values in either a finite interval [0, T] or the infinite intervals [0, ∞), [0, ∞]. We denote the time parameter set by 𝕋 in each case.
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
7. European Options in Continuous Time
Abstract
In this chapter we develop a continuous time theory which is the analogue of that in Chapters 1 to 3. The simple model consists of a riskless bond and a risky asset, which can be thought of as a stock. The dynamics of our model are described in Section 7.1. The following two sections present the fundamental results of Girsanov and martingale representation. These are then applied to discuss the hedging and pricing of European options. In particular, we establish the famous results of Black and Scholes, results which are applied widely in the industry in spite of the simplified nature of the model.
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
8. The American Option
Abstract
As in Chapter 7, we suppose there is an underlying probability space (Ω, F, Q). The time parameter t takes values in [0,T]. There is a filtration 𝔽 = {F t } that satisfies the ‘usual conditions’ (see Chapter 6, page 99).
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
9. Bonds and Term Structure
Abstract
Suppose (Ω, F, P) is a probability space and B t , 0 ≤ tT, is a Brownian motion, {F t } denotes the (complete, right-continuous) filtration generated by B. We first review the martingale pricing results of Chapter 7.
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
10. Consumption-Investment Strategies
Abstract
The results of this chapter are a presentation of the comprehensive, fundamental, and elegant contributions of Karatzas, Lehoczky, Sethi, and Shreve. See, for example, the papers [157] through [161].
Robert J. Elliott, P. Ekkehard Kopp
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Mathematics of Financial Markets
verfasst von
Robert J. Elliott
P. Ekkehard Kopp
Copyright-Jahr
1999
Verlag
Springer New York
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4757-7146-6
Print ISBN
978-1-4757-7148-0
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-7146-6