Abstract. The Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing states { roughly speaking { that the absence of arbitrage possibilities for a stochastic process S is equivalent to the existence of an equivalent martingale measure for S. It turns out that it is quite hard to give precise and sharp versions of this theorem in proper generality, if one insists on modifying the concept of \no arbitrage " as little as possible. It was shown in [DS94] that for a locally bounded Rd-valued semi-martingale S the condition of No Free Lunch with Vanishing Risk is equivalent to the existence of an equivalent local martingale measure for the process S. It was asked whether the local boundedness assumption on S may be dropped. In the present paper we show that i...
This paper has two purposes. The first is to extend the notions of an n-dimensional semimartingale a...
This paper does not suppose a priori that the evolution of the price of a financial asset is a semim...
Abstract. This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of...
Abstract. The Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing states- roughly speaking-that the absence of arbi...
We give two examples showing that for unbounded continuous price processes, the no-free-lunch assump...
This paper has two purposes. The first is to extend the notions of an n-dimensional semimartingale a...
Abstract. We investigate the existence of an absolutely continuous martingale measure. For continuou...
This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of equivalen...
This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of equivalen...
This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of equivalen...
This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of equivalen...
International audienceThis paper does not suppose a priori that the evolution of the price of a fina...
Abstract It is shown that, in a semimartingale financial market model, there is equiv-alence between...
absence of arbitrage implies that there exists a linear functional that values all con-tingent claim...
We consider an incomplete market model where asset prices are modelled by Ito processes, and derive ...
This paper has two purposes. The first is to extend the notions of an n-dimensional semimartingale a...
This paper does not suppose a priori that the evolution of the price of a financial asset is a semim...
Abstract. This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of...
Abstract. The Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing states- roughly speaking-that the absence of arbi...
We give two examples showing that for unbounded continuous price processes, the no-free-lunch assump...
This paper has two purposes. The first is to extend the notions of an n-dimensional semimartingale a...
Abstract. We investigate the existence of an absolutely continuous martingale measure. For continuou...
This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of equivalen...
This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of equivalen...
This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of equivalen...
This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of equivalen...
International audienceThis paper does not suppose a priori that the evolution of the price of a fina...
Abstract It is shown that, in a semimartingale financial market model, there is equiv-alence between...
absence of arbitrage implies that there exists a linear functional that values all con-tingent claim...
We consider an incomplete market model where asset prices are modelled by Ito processes, and derive ...
This paper has two purposes. The first is to extend the notions of an n-dimensional semimartingale a...
This paper does not suppose a priori that the evolution of the price of a financial asset is a semim...
Abstract. This paper addresses the equivalence between the absence of arbitrage and the existence of...