Replication of financial derivatives under extreme market models given marginals
Tongseok Lim

TL;DR
This paper extends robust financial modeling by demonstrating the existence of super- and sub-hedging portfolios for path-dependent derivatives in multi-asset, multi-period markets using martingale optimal transport theory.
Contribution
It proves the dual attainment in multi-period vectorial martingale optimal transport, enabling robust derivative replication under market uncertainties.
Findings
Existence of super- and sub-hedging portfolios for complex derivatives.
Dual attainment established for multi-period vectorial martingale optimal transport.
Framework accommodates arbitrarily many assets and time periods.
Abstract
The Black-Scholes-Merton model is a mathematical model for the dynamics of a financial market that includes derivative investment instruments, and its formula provides a theoretical price estimate of European-style options. The model's fundamental idea is to eliminate risk by hedging the option by purchasing and selling the underlying asset in a specific way, that is, to replicate the payoff of the option with a portfolio (which continuously trades the underlying) whose value at each time can be verified. One of the most crucial, yet restrictive, assumptions for this task is that the market follows a geometric Brownian motion, which has been relaxed and generalized in various ways. The concept of robust finance revolves around developing models that account for uncertainties and variations in financial markets. Martingale Optimal Transport, which is an adaptation of the Optimal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStochastic processes and financial applications · Financial Risk and Volatility Modeling
