The concept of absence of opportunities for free lunches is one of the pillars in the economic theory of financial markets. This natural assumption has proved very fruitful and has lead to great mathematical, as well as economical, insights in quantitative finance. Formulating rigorously, the exact definition of absence of opportunities for riskless profit turned out to be a highly nontrivial fact that troubled mathematicians and economists for at least two decades. The purpose of this article is to give a quick (and, hence necessarily, incomplete) account of the recent work aimed at providing a simple and intuitive no-free-lunch assumption that would suffice in formulating a version of the celebrated fundamental theorem of asset pricing
Abstract : We prove an L ∞ version of the Yan theorem and deduce from it a necessary condition for t...
This free introductory economics text is available for anyone interested in free market economics fr...
We give two examples showing that for unbounded continuous price processes, the no-free-lunch assump...
We introduce the notion of a Market Free Lunch that depends on the preferences of all agents partici...
We show that the classical concepts of No Arbitrage (NA) and of No Free Lunch with Vanishing Risk (N...
King and Korf introduced, in the framework of a discrete-time dynamic market model on a general prob...
We give a comparison of two no-arbitrage conditions for the fundamental theorem of asset pricing. Th...
King and Korf [9] introduced, in the framework of a discrete-time dynamic market model on a general ...
Abstract. No asymptotic free lunch (NAFL) was introduced in [11] and led to a general version of the...
We provide equivalence of numerous no-free-lunch type conditions for financial markets where the ass...
Abstract. In this paper we propose a model of \u85nancial markets in which agents have limited abili...
We provide equivalence of numerous no-free-lunch type conditions for financial markets where the ass...
This letter discusses the recent paper "Some technical remarks on the proof of the 'No Free Lunch' t...
The no free lunch condition is neither necessary nor sufficient for the utility set to be closed and...
We propose a continuous time model for financial markets with proportional transactions costs and a ...
Abstract : We prove an L ∞ version of the Yan theorem and deduce from it a necessary condition for t...
This free introductory economics text is available for anyone interested in free market economics fr...
We give two examples showing that for unbounded continuous price processes, the no-free-lunch assump...
We introduce the notion of a Market Free Lunch that depends on the preferences of all agents partici...
We show that the classical concepts of No Arbitrage (NA) and of No Free Lunch with Vanishing Risk (N...
King and Korf introduced, in the framework of a discrete-time dynamic market model on a general prob...
We give a comparison of two no-arbitrage conditions for the fundamental theorem of asset pricing. Th...
King and Korf [9] introduced, in the framework of a discrete-time dynamic market model on a general ...
Abstract. No asymptotic free lunch (NAFL) was introduced in [11] and led to a general version of the...
We provide equivalence of numerous no-free-lunch type conditions for financial markets where the ass...
Abstract. In this paper we propose a model of \u85nancial markets in which agents have limited abili...
We provide equivalence of numerous no-free-lunch type conditions for financial markets where the ass...
This letter discusses the recent paper "Some technical remarks on the proof of the 'No Free Lunch' t...
The no free lunch condition is neither necessary nor sufficient for the utility set to be closed and...
We propose a continuous time model for financial markets with proportional transactions costs and a ...
Abstract : We prove an L ∞ version of the Yan theorem and deduce from it a necessary condition for t...
This free introductory economics text is available for anyone interested in free market economics fr...
We give two examples showing that for unbounded continuous price processes, the no-free-lunch assump...