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Portfolio Theory and Arbitrage: A Course in Mathematical Finance [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 309 pages, kaal: 578 g
  • Sari: Graduate Studies in Mathematics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-10: 1470465981
  • ISBN-13: 9781470465988
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 309 pages, kaal: 578 g
  • Sari: Graduate Studies in Mathematics
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: American Mathematical Society
  • ISBN-10: 1470465981
  • ISBN-13: 9781470465988
Teised raamatud teemal:
This book develops a mathematical theory for finance, based on a simple and intuitive absence-of-arbitrage principle. This posits that it should not be possible to fund a non-trivial liability, starting with initial capital arbitrarily near zero. The principle is easy-to-test in specific models, as it is described in terms of the underlying market characteristics; it is shown to be equivalent to the existence of the so-called ""Kelly"" or growth-optimal portfolio, of the log-optimal portfolio, and of appropriate local martingale deflators. The resulting theory is powerful enough to treat in great generality the fundamental questions of hedging, valuation, and portfolio optimization.

The book contains a considerable amount of new research and results, as well as a significant number of exercises. It can be used as a basic text for graduate courses in Probability and Stochastic Analysis, and in Mathematical Finance. No prior familiarity with finance is required, but it is assumed that readers have a good working knowledge of real analysis, measure theory, and of basic probability theory. Familiarity with stochastic analysis is also assumed, as is integration with respect to continuous semimartingales.
Preface ix
Preview x
Prerequisites xiii
Further topics xiii
Suggested reading pathways xiv
Acknowledgements xv
Chapter 1 The Market
1(40)
§1.1 Probabilistic setup
1(8)
§1.2 Assets and investment
9(7)
§1.3 Proportional investment
16(6)
§1.4 Relative performance
22(8)
§1.5 Functional generation of stock portfolios
30(11)
Notes-and Complements
38(3)
Chapter 2 Numeraires and Market Viability
41(58)
§2.1 Supermartingale numeraires
42(9)
§2.2 Market viability
51(15)
§2.3 Optimality properties of supermartingale numeraires
66(15)
§2.4 The local martingale numeraire for stock portfolios
81(6)
§2.5 Capital Asset Pricing Model
87(12)
Notes and Complements
93(6)
Chapter 3 Financing, Optimization, Maximality
99(90)
§3.1 Optional Decomposition
101(7)
§3.2 Financing
108(19)
§3.3 Contingent claims; Completeness
127(21)
§3.4 Utility Maximization
148(20)
§3.5 Maximality
168(21)
Notes and Complements
184(5)
Chapter 4 Ramifications and Extensions
189(60)
§4.1 Drawdown-constrained investment
190(15)
§4.2 Simple trading and semimartingales
205(12)
§4.3 Models with infinitely many assets
217(32)
Notes and Complements
245(4)
Appendix A Elements of Functional and Convex Analysis
249(46)
§A.1 A minimax theorem
250(3)
§A.2 The space L°
253(11)
§A.3 Concave optimization and duality on L°+
264(11)
§A.4 The space L∞
275(9)
§A.5 Reproducing kernel Hilbert space
284(11)
Notes and Complements
291(4)
Bibliography 295(12)
Index 307
Ioannis Karatzas, Columbia University, New York, NY.

Constantinos Kardaras, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK.