Stochastic integrals driven by fractional Brownian motion and arbitrage : A tale of two integrals

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Detail(s)

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)519-525
Journal / PublicationQuantitative Finance
Volume9
Issue number5
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2009
Externally publishedYes

Abstract

Recent research suggests that fractional Brownian motion can be used to model the long-range dependence structure of the stock market. Fractional Brownian motion is not a semi-martingale and arbitrage opportunities do exist, however. Hu and Øksendal [Infin. Dimens. Anal., Quant. Probab. Relat. Top., 2003, 6, 1-32] and Elliott and van der Hoek [Math. Finan., 2003, 13, 301-330] propose the use of the white noise calculus approach to circumvent this difficulty. Under such a setting, they argue that arbitrage does not exist in the fractional market. To unravel this discrepancy, we examine the definition of self-financing strategies used by these authors. By refining their definitions, a new notion of continuously rebalanced self-financing strategies, which is compatible with simple buy and hold strategies, is given. Under this definition, arbitrage opportunities do exist in fractional markets. © 2009 Taylor & Francis.

Research Area(s)

  • Arbitrage pricing, Fractional Brownian motion, Option pricing, Stochastic differential equations

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