We study arbitrage opportunities, market viability and utility maximization in market models with an insider. Assuming that an economic agent possesses an additional information in the form of an (Formula presented.)-measurable discrete random variable G, we give criteria for the no unbounded profits with bounded risk property to hold, characterize optimal arbitrage strategies, and prove duality results for the utility maximization problem faced by the insider. Examples of markets satisfying NUPBR yet admitting arbitrage opportunities are provided. For the case when G is a continuous random variable, we consider the notion of no asymptotic arbitrage of the first kind (NAA1) and give an explicit construction for unbounded profits if NAA1 fai...
Pricing and Hedging in Incomplete Markets: Fundamental Theorems and Robust Utility Maximizatio
We construct and study market models admitting optimal arbitrage. We say that a model admits optimal...
In this paper, we consider a security market in which two investors on different infor-mation levels...
Within the well-known framework of financial portfolio optimization, we analyze the existing relati...
This Ph.D. thesis consists of four dependent chapters and is devoted to a systematic study of arbitr...
AbstractWe consider financial market models based on Wiener space with two agents on different infor...
In this paper we consider an insider with privileged information that is affected by an independent ...
In this paper, we consider a security market in which two investors on different information levels ...
In this thesis, we study insider trading and consider a financial market and an enlarged financial m...
In an incomplete market underpinned by the trinomial model, we consider two investors : an ordinary ...
AbstractIn this paper, we consider a complete continuous-time financial market with discontinuous pr...
The background for the general mathematical link between utility and information theory investigated...
We consider a popular model of microeconomics with countably many assets: the Arbitrage Pricing Mode...
AbstractIn this paper, we consider a security market in which two investors on different information...
Any agent with access to information that is not available to the market at large is considered an ‘...
Pricing and Hedging in Incomplete Markets: Fundamental Theorems and Robust Utility Maximizatio
We construct and study market models admitting optimal arbitrage. We say that a model admits optimal...
In this paper, we consider a security market in which two investors on different infor-mation levels...
Within the well-known framework of financial portfolio optimization, we analyze the existing relati...
This Ph.D. thesis consists of four dependent chapters and is devoted to a systematic study of arbitr...
AbstractWe consider financial market models based on Wiener space with two agents on different infor...
In this paper we consider an insider with privileged information that is affected by an independent ...
In this paper, we consider a security market in which two investors on different information levels ...
In this thesis, we study insider trading and consider a financial market and an enlarged financial m...
In an incomplete market underpinned by the trinomial model, we consider two investors : an ordinary ...
AbstractIn this paper, we consider a complete continuous-time financial market with discontinuous pr...
The background for the general mathematical link between utility and information theory investigated...
We consider a popular model of microeconomics with countably many assets: the Arbitrage Pricing Mode...
AbstractIn this paper, we consider a security market in which two investors on different information...
Any agent with access to information that is not available to the market at large is considered an ‘...
Pricing and Hedging in Incomplete Markets: Fundamental Theorems and Robust Utility Maximizatio
We construct and study market models admitting optimal arbitrage. We say that a model admits optimal...
In this paper, we consider a security market in which two investors on different infor-mation levels...