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Martingale pricing is a pricing approach based on the notions of martingale and
risk neutrality In economics and finance, risk neutral preferences are preferences that are neither risk averse nor risk seeking. A risk neutral party's decisions are not affected by the degree of uncertainty in a set of outcomes, so a risk neutral party is indif ...
. The martingale pricing approach is a cornerstone of modern quantitative finance and can be applied to a variety of derivatives contracts, e.g.
options Option or Options may refer to: Computing *Option key, a key on Apple computer keyboards *Option type, a polymorphic data type in programming languages *Command-line option, an optional parameter to a command *OPTIONS, an HTTP request method ...
,
futures Futures may mean: Finance *Futures contract, a tradable financial derivatives contract *Futures exchange, a financial market where futures contracts are traded * ''Futures'' (magazine), an American finance magazine Music * ''Futures'' (album), a ...
,
interest rate derivative In finance, an interest rate derivative (IRD) is a derivative whose payments are determined through calculation techniques where the underlying benchmark product is an interest rate, or set of different interest rates. There are a multitude of diff ...
s,
credit derivatives In finance, a credit derivative refers to any one of "various instruments and techniques designed to separate and then transfer the ''credit risk''" The Economist ''Passing on the risks'' 2 November 1996 or the risk of an event of default of a co ...
, etc. In contrast to the PDE approach to pricing, martingale pricing formulae are in the form of expectations which can be efficiently solved numerically using a
Monte Carlo Monte Carlo (; ; french: Monte-Carlo , or colloquially ''Monte-Carl'' ; lij, Munte Carlu ; ) is officially an administrative area of the Principality of Monaco, specifically the ward of Monte Carlo/Spélugues, where the Monte Carlo Casino is ...
approach. As such, Martingale pricing is preferred when valuing high-dimensional contracts such as a basket of options. On the other hand, valuing American-style contracts is troublesome and requires discretizing the problem (making it like a
Bermudan option In finance, the style or family of an option is the class into which the option falls, usually defined by the dates on which the option may be exercised. The vast majority of options are either European or American (style) options. These options� ...
) and only in 2001 F. A. Longstaff and E. S. Schwartz developed a practical Monte Carlo method for pricing American options.


Measure theory representation

Suppose the state of the market can be represented by the
filtered probability space Filtration is a physical separation process that separates solid matter and fluid from a mixture using a ''filter medium'' that has a complex structure through which only the fluid can pass. Solid particles that cannot pass through the filte ...
,(\Omega,(\mathcal_)_,\tilde). Let \_ be a stochastic price process on this space. One may price a derivative security, V(t,S(t)) under the philosophy of no arbitrage as,
D(t)V(t,S(t))=\tilde \mathcal_t \qquad dD(t)=-r(t)D(t) \ dt
Where \tilde is the
risk-neutral measure In mathematical finance, a risk-neutral measure (also called an equilibrium measure, or '' equivalent martingale measure'') is a probability measure such that each share price is exactly equal to the discounted expectation of the share price u ...
. (r(t))_ is an \mathcal_t-measurable (risk-free, possibly stochastic) interest rate process. This is accomplished through
almost sure In probability theory, an event is said to happen almost surely (sometimes abbreviated as a.s.) if it happens with probability 1 (or Lebesgue measure 1). In other words, the set of possible exceptions may be non-empty, but it has probability 0. ...
replication of the derivative's time T payoff using only underlying securities, and the risk-free money market (MMA). These underlyings have prices that are observable and known. Specifically, one constructs a portfolio process \_ in continuous time, where he holds \Delta(t) shares of the underlying stock at each time t, and X(t)-\Delta(t)S(t) cash earning the risk-free rate r(t). The portfolio obeys the stochastic differential equation dX(t)=\Delta(t) \ dS(t) + r(t)(X(t)-\Delta(t)S(t)) \ dt One will then attempt to apply
Girsanov theorem In probability theory, the Girsanov theorem tells how stochastic processes change under changes in measure. The theorem is especially important in the theory of financial mathematics as it tells how to convert from the physical measure which desc ...
by first computing \frac; that is, the Radon–Nikodym derivative with respect to the observed market probability distribution. This ensures that the discounted replicating portfolio process is a Martingale under risk neutral conditions. If such a process \Delta(t) can be well-defined and constructed, then choosing V(0,S(0))=X(0) will result in \tilde (T)=V(T)= 1, which immediately implies that this happens \mathbb-
almost surely In probability theory, an event is said to happen almost surely (sometimes abbreviated as a.s.) if it happens with probability 1 (or Lebesgue measure 1). In other words, the set of possible exceptions may be non-empty, but it has probability 0. ...
as well, since the two measures are equivalent.


See also

* Brownian model of financial markets *
Martingale (probability theory) In probability theory, a martingale is a sequence of random variables (i.e., a stochastic process) for which, at a particular time, the conditional expectation of the next value in the sequence is equal to the present value, regardless of all ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Martingale Pricing Finance theories Mathematical finance Pricing Financial models