Infinite horizon utility maximisation from inter-temporal wealth
Michael Monoyios

TL;DR
This paper develops a duality theory for infinite horizon utility maximisation from inter-temporal wealth under minimal no-arbitrage conditions, extending previous work and providing stronger duality results without requiring NFLVR.
Contribution
It introduces a duality framework using deflators under NUPBR for infinite horizon utility maximisation, avoiding the need for equivalent martingale measures and strengthening existing duality results.
Findings
Established a convex duality theorem for infinite horizon utility maximisation.
Proved the dual domain is the bipolar of the primal domain.
Demonstrated the theory with examples including a Bessel process market.
Abstract
We develop a duality theory for the problem of maximising expected lifetime utility from inter-temporal wealth over an infinite horizon, under the minimal no-arbitrage assumption of No Unbounded Profit with Bounded Risk (NUPBR). We use only deflators, with no arguments involving equivalent martingale measures, so do not require the stronger condition of No Free Lunch with Vanishing Risk (NFLVR). Our formalism also works without alteration for the finite horizon version of the problem. As well as extending work of Bouchard and Pham to any horizon and to a weaker no-arbitrage setting, we obtain a stronger duality statement, because we do not assume by definition that the dual domain is the polar set of the primal space. Instead, we adopt a method akin to that used for inter-temporal consumption problems, developing a supermartingale property of the deflated wealth and its path that yields…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStochastic processes and financial applications · Risk and Portfolio Optimization · Economic theories and models
