Seminar series
Date
Fri, 25 May 2012
Time
14:15 - 15:00
Location
DH 1st floor SR
Speaker
Prof Dorje Brody
Organisation
Brunel Univeristy

The geometric Lévy model (GLM) is a natural generalisation of the geometric Brownian motion (GBM) model. The theory of such models simplifies considerably if one takes a pricing kernel approach. In one dimension, once the underlying Lévy process has been specified, the GLM has four parameters: the initial price, the interest rate, the volatility and the risk aversion. The pricing kernel is the product of a discount factor and a risk aversion martingale. For GBM, the risk aversion parameter is the market price of risk. In this talk I show that for a GLM, this interpretation is not valid: the excess rate of return above the interest rate is a nonlinear function of the volatility and the risk aversion such that it is positive, and is increasing with respect to these variables. In the case of foreign exchange, Siegel’s paradox implies that one can construct foreign exchange models for which the excess rate of return is positive for both the exchange rate and the inverse exchange rate. Examples are worked out for a range of Lévy processes. (The talk is based on a recent paper: Brody, Hughston & Mackie, Proceedings of the Royal Society London, to appear in May 2012).  

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