Abstract:
Pricing of financial contracts or option pricing is one of the main
research areas of modern Mathematical Finance. Hence, new valuable
developments in this area remain well-motivated and highly desirable.
The aim of the talk is to present some comprehensive issues that can be
interesting for a wider audience besides those experts who primarily
work in Mathematical Finance. Moreover, the developments in option
pricing can be considered as a reasonable source of new problems and
studies in related mathematical disciplines. In the talk we discuss the
essence of the notion “financial contract” and formulate the main
problem for study in this context. A dual theory of option pricing will
be developed by means of market completions as an alternative of the
well-known option price characterization via martingale measures. We
also present another approach in option pricing which is based on
comparison theorems for solutions of stochastic differential equations.
Besides perfect hedging methods we develop the partial or imperfect
hedging technique that is concentrated around a statistical notion of
“loss functions” and a financial notion of “risk measures”. It will be
shown how such methods (quantile hedging and CVaR-hedging) work and how
these findings are applied in life insurance and financial regulation
areas. A special attention will be devoted to estimation problems of
parameters of financial models. In particular, it will be shown what
kind of mathematical problems and effects arise in the volatility
estimation. Finally, we will pay our attention to extensions of
probability distributions of stock returns using orthogonal polynomials
techniques. Going in this way we get a possibility to see what happens
beyond the Black-Scholes model.