We show that coherent risk measures alone are ineffective in curbing the behaviour of investors with limited liability or excessive tail-risk seeking behaviour if the market admits statistical arbitrage opportunities which we term ρ-arbitrage for a risk measure ρ. We show how to determine analytically whether such ρ-arbitrage portfolios exist in complete markets and in the Markowitz model. We also consider realistic numerical examples of incomplete markets and determine whether Expected-Shortfall arbitrage exists in these markets. We find that the answer depends heavily upon the probability model selected by the risk manager but that it is certainly possible for expected shortfall constraints to be ineffective in realistic markets. Since va...
In theory, an investor can make infinite profits by taking unlimited positions in an arbitrage. In r...
We analyze the pricing of risky income streams in a world with competitive security markets where in...
The overlapping expectations and the collective absence of arbitrage con-ditions introduced in the e...
There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often difficult to make use of arbitrage opport...
There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often difficult to make use of arbitrage opport...
There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often difficult to make use of arbitrage opport...
Abstract There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often difficult to make use of arbitra...
The purpose of this paper is to dispel some common misunderstandings about capital adequacy rules ba...
Coherent measures of risk defined by the axioms of monotonicity, subadditivity, positive homogeneity...
Value at Risk has lost the battle against Expected Shortfall on theoretical grounds, the latter sati...
We test the limits of arbitrage argument for the survival of irrationality-induced financial anomali...
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision recently proposed fundamental changes in the regulatory t...
Expected shortfall (ES) has been widely accepted as a risk measure that is conceptually superior to ...
This thesis consists of three parts. The first part studies the optimal portfolio selection of expec...
This thesis intends to examine a risk measure used for estimating a potential future loss. The risk ...
In theory, an investor can make infinite profits by taking unlimited positions in an arbitrage. In r...
We analyze the pricing of risky income streams in a world with competitive security markets where in...
The overlapping expectations and the collective absence of arbitrage con-ditions introduced in the e...
There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often difficult to make use of arbitrage opport...
There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often difficult to make use of arbitrage opport...
There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often difficult to make use of arbitrage opport...
Abstract There is an extensive literature claiming that it is often difficult to make use of arbitra...
The purpose of this paper is to dispel some common misunderstandings about capital adequacy rules ba...
Coherent measures of risk defined by the axioms of monotonicity, subadditivity, positive homogeneity...
Value at Risk has lost the battle against Expected Shortfall on theoretical grounds, the latter sati...
We test the limits of arbitrage argument for the survival of irrationality-induced financial anomali...
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision recently proposed fundamental changes in the regulatory t...
Expected shortfall (ES) has been widely accepted as a risk measure that is conceptually superior to ...
This thesis consists of three parts. The first part studies the optimal portfolio selection of expec...
This thesis intends to examine a risk measure used for estimating a potential future loss. The risk ...
In theory, an investor can make infinite profits by taking unlimited positions in an arbitrage. In r...
We analyze the pricing of risky income streams in a world with competitive security markets where in...
The overlapping expectations and the collective absence of arbitrage con-ditions introduced in the e...