Price as a Choice Under Nonstochastic Randomness in Finance
32 Pages Posted: 8 Jan 2013
There are 2 versions of this paper
Price as a Choice Under Nonstochastic Randomness in Finance
Date Written: January 1, 2013
Abstract
Arrow-Debreu state preference approach to derivatives pricing is embedded into decision theoretical framework. Derivatives prices are considered as decision variables. Axiomatic decision theory, concerned with the attitude toward uncertainty and existence of closed in *-weak topology sets of finitely-additive probabilities is applied. A version of indifference pricing relation is obtained that extends classical relations for European contingent claims. The obtained structure happens to be a convenient way of addressing such traditional problems of mathematical finance as derivatives valuation in incomplete markets, portfolio choice and market microstructure modeling. An alternative interpretation of the closed sets of finitely-additive probabilities as statistical laws of statistically unstable (nonstochastic) random phenomena is discussed.
Keywords: Statistical instability, Randomness, Finitely-additive measures, Decision theory, Uncertainty profiling, Derivatives valuation, Portfolio choice, Bid-Ask spread
JEL Classification: C18, C44, D81, G02, G11, G13
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Optimal Trading Strategy and Supply/Demand Dynamics
By Anna A. Obizhaeva and Jiang Wang
-
Optimal Trading Strategy and Supply/Demand Dynamics
By Anna A. Obizhaeva and Jiang Wang
-
Optimal Trading Strategy and Supply/Demand Dynamics
By Anna A. Obizhaeva and Jiang Wang
-
Optimal Execution Strategies in Limit Order Books with General Shape Functions
By Aurélien Alfonsi, Antje Fruth, ...
-
By Olaf Korn and Alexander Kempf
-
Quasi-Arbitrage and Price Manipulation
By Gur Huberman and Werner Stanzl
-
Fluctuations and Response in Financial Markets: The Subtle Nature of 'Random' Price Changes
By Jean-philippe Bouchaud, Yuval Gefen, ...
-
By Gur Huberman and Werner Stanzl
-
How Markets Slowly Digest Changes in Supply and Demand
By Jean-philippe Bouchaud, J. Doyne Farmer, ...
-
No-Dynamic-Arbitrage and Market Impact
By Jim Gatheral