Contingent Claim Valuation under Increasing Profit, Strong Arbitrage, and Arbitrage of the First Kind
Abstract
We study the upper hedging price for contingent claims in market models with strong types of arbitrage: increasing profit, strong arbitrage, and arbitrage of the first kind. The existence of arbitrage may make the price smaller than if it did not exist. For example, when the asset price process has a reflecting boundary, which introduces increasing profit in the market model, the option prices are reduced to those of the corresponding options that knock-out at the boundary. Furthermore, we demonstrate that corporate stock price processes with increasing profit are obtained as a result of corporate stock issuance and repurchase plans.
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