Modelling Information Flows in Financial Markets
Dorje C. Brody, Lane P. Hughston, Andrea Macrina

TL;DR
This paper reviews an information-based asset pricing framework where asset prices are derived from market information about future cash flows, incorporating stochastic processes, noise, and asymmetric information to explain market dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces explicit formulae for asset and derivative prices within an information flow model, linking volatility and correlation to primitive cash flow assumptions.
Findings
Explicit asset pricing formulas derived from information processes
Method to infer information flow parameters from option prices
Modeling of stochastic volatility and correlation from cash flow assumptions
Abstract
This paper presents an overview of information-based asset pricing. In this approach, an asset is defined by its cash-flow structure. The market is assumed to have access to "partial" information about future cash flows. Each cash flow is determined by a collection of independent market factors called X-factors. The market filtration is generated by a set of information processes, each of which carries information about one of the X-factors, and eventually reveals the X-factor. Each information process has two terms, one of which contains a "signal" about the associated X-factor, and the other of which represents "market noise". The price of an asset is given by the expectation of the discounted cash flows in the risk-neutral measure, conditional on the information provided by the market. When the market noise is modelled by a Brownian bridge one is able to construct explicit formulae…
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