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The Wiener Process and Rare Events in Financial Markets

1. The Wiener process is a mathematical model for continuous stock price movements over time. 2. To make the model more realistic, rare jump events are added using point processes which cause occasional large changes in stock prices due to significant events. 3. The Wiener process and jumps are used to model stock price changes, with the Wiener process representing ordinary changes and jumps representing rare events.

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Norbert Durand
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
103 views17 pages

The Wiener Process and Rare Events in Financial Markets

1. The Wiener process is a mathematical model for continuous stock price movements over time. 2. To make the model more realistic, rare jump events are added using point processes which cause occasional large changes in stock prices due to significant events. 3. The Wiener process and jumps are used to model stock price changes, with the Wiener process representing ordinary changes and jumps representing rare events.

Uploaded by

Norbert Durand
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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3.

The Wiener Process and Rare Events in


Financial Markets

The Wiener process works as a mathematical


model for continuous time stock price.

To make the process even more realistic oc-


casional rare events causing jumps into the
sample paths are added by modeling with
some point processes.

Consider first the modeling the ”ordinary”


events with Wiener process (Brownian mo-
tion) (see here for a heuristic construction of
the Brownian motion).

1
Definition 3.1: A Wiener process, Wt, rela-
tive to a family of information sets {It} (fil-
tration), is a stochastic process such that
1. W0 = 0 (with probability one).
2. Wt is continuous.
3. Wt is adapted to the filtration {It}.
4. For s ≤ t, Wt − Ws is independent of Is,
with E[Wt − Ws] = 0 and Var[Wt − Ws] =
E(Wt − Ws)2 = t − s.

2
Equivalently we can define:

Definition 3.2: A random process Bt, t ∈


[0, T ] is a (standard) Brownian motion if
1. B0 = 0.
2. Bt is continuous.
3. Increments of Bt are independent. I.e., if
0 ≤ t0 < t1 < · · · < tn, then Bt1 −Bt0 , . . . , Btn −
Btn−1 are independent.
4. If 0 ≤ s ≤ t, Bt − Bs ∼ N (0, t − s).

30

20
+std

10
W(t)

-10

-std
-20
80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00

Time

Figure 3.1: Three sample paths of a standard


Brownian motion.
3
Properties:
(a) Wt is an It-martingale.
(b) Wt has independent increments.
(c) E[Wt] = 0 for all t.
(d) Var[Wt] = t.
(e) The law of iterated logarithms
Wt
lim sup √ =1 (with probability one)
t→∞ 2t log log t
(f) Wt/t → 0 w.p.1 as t → ∞.
(g) Wt2 − t is an It-martingale.
(h) exp{σWt − (σ 2/2)t} is an It-martingale.

4
Proof: (a) Let s ≤ t, then E[Wt − Ws|Is] =
E[Wt − Ws] = 0. So E[Wt|Is] = Ws.
(b) Let 0 ≤ s < t < u then Wt − Ws is It-
measurable (Ws, Wt ∈ It ⊂ Iu) and Wu −
Wt is independent of It, which implies that
Wu − Wt is independent of Wt − Ws.
(c) 0 = E[Wt − W0] = E[Wt].
(d) Var[Wt] = Var[Wt − W0] = t − 0 = t.
(e) Will not be proven, but means that if b >

1, for sufficiently large t, Wt < b 2t log log t.
(f) Follows from the law of iterated loga-
rithms.
(g) and (f) Left as exercises.

5
40

30 log-log

20
std
10
W_t

-10

-20

-30

-40
80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00
Time

Figure 3.2: The law of iterated logarithms.

6
Example 3.1:
1 2
St = S0 e(µ− 2 σ )t+σWt ,
where S0 > 0, and µ and σ > 0 are constants. This is an example
of generalized Brownian motion, called also a Geometric Brow-
nian motion, and serves as a basic model for stock prices. The
distribution of log St is normal with mean
³ ´
1
log S0 + µ − σ 2 t
2
and variance σ 2 t. The continuously compounded return to the
stock, per unit of time (e.g. if annual, then annualized cumula-
tive returns), over time interval [t, t + u], u > 0, is
1 1 1
Ru = (log St+u − log St ) = µ − σ 2 + σ (Wt+u − Wt ).
u 2 u
Because for fixed t, Wt+u − Wt is a standard Brownian motion
with time index u, property (f) above implies that
1 2
Ru → µ − σ as u → ∞.
2

Note. E[St ] = S0 eµt .

7
2000

1600

1200
S(t)

800

E[S(t)]
400

0
80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00

Time

Figure 3.3: Sample paths of monthly stock price processes St =


1 2
S0 e(µ− 2 σ )t+σWt
with S0 = 100, and annual rate of return µ = 10%

and volatility σ = 25%.

8
30

20
Monthly return (%)

10

-10

-20

-30
80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00

Month

Figure 3.4: Monthly log-returns Rt = 100(log St − log St−s ) for

the sample period 1980:1 to 2001:12.

60
Annualized cumulative return (%)

40

20

-20

-40

-60
80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00

Month

Figure 3.5: Annualized cumulative log-returns RtA = 100 12


t
(log St −

log S0 ) for the period 1980:1 to 2001:12 (monthly observations).

9
Remark 3.1: In the above example the geometric Brow-
nian motion is usually given in the differential form
dSt
= µ dt + σ dWt,
St
(”model of the return”) or
dSt = µ St dt + σ St dWt.

10
Rare Events and Poisson Process

In stock markets we occasionally observe sud-


den jumps in the prices due to some impor-
tant or extreme event that affects the price.

To model these a reasonable assumption could


be that the jumps—being consequences of
extreme shocks—are independent of the usual
information driving innovations dWt.

11
Following Merton∗ we can introduce a model
where the asset price has jumps superim-
posed upon a geometric Brownian motion
such that
dSt
(1) = (µ − λ ν)dt + σ dWt + dJt,
St
where µ the asset’s expected return, λ is
the jump intensity (e.g. average number of
jumps per year), ν is the average size of the
jump as a percentage of the asset price, σ
is the return volatility, and Jt is related to
the (independent) Poisson process generat-
ing the jumps.

Once the jump occurs we can superimpose it


into the process by assuming that it is gen-
erated from a normal distribution with mean
ν and standard deviation equaling the jump
volatility.

∗ Merton, R.C. (1976). Option pricing when underlying stock


returns are discontinuous. Journal of Financial Economics, No.
3, 125–144.

12
Example 3.2: Consider a situation where the underly-
ing process has a jump frequency one per year (λ = 1/2)
(i.e., on average once every two year). The average
percentage jump size ν is assumed for simplicity to be
equal to zero and the volatility of the jump is 20%.

Suppose the stock price now is 100, the drift is 8%,


σ = 15%. Below are four sample baths from the dif-
fusion process
dSt
= µ dt + σ dWt + dJt .
St
We model dJt as dJt = 0.20 Z U , where Z is a standard
normal variable and U is a random variable such that
P (U = 1) = λdt and P (U = 0) = 1 − λdt. In addition
Z and U are independent.

A discrete approximation of the above difference equa-


tion is
³ √ ´
St = St−h 1 + 0.08h + 0.15 h Zt + dJt ,

13
Sample paths of a jump process:
S(t) = S(t-dt)*[1 + 0.08dt + 0.15 sqrt(dt) Z(t) + dJ(t)],
dJ(t) = 0.2 Z U(t), with P(U(t) = 1) = 0.5 dt
S(t) 700

600

500

400

300

200

100

0
90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06
Month
S1 S2 S3 S4

14
We can rewrite the diffusion process in this example
as
dSt
= (µ − λν)dt + σ dWt
St
if the Poisson event does not occur, and
dSt
= (µ − λν)dt + σ dWt + 0.20Z
St
if the Poisson event occurs.

It can be shown that the process then is


·µ ¶ ¸
1 2
St = S0 exp µ − σ − λν t + σWt J(Nt ),
2
where
" Nt
#
X
J(Nt) = exp Ji
i=1
with Ji = 0.20Zi , and Zi are independent N (0, 1) ran-
dom variables. Nt has the Poisson distribution, dis-
cussed more closely below.

15
In order to model the jump intensity, let Nt
denote the total number of extreme (unordi-
nary) shocks until time t (counting process).

Then once the event occurs, Nt changes by


one unit and remains otherwise unchanged.

Conceptually we can model this within an in-


finitesimal interval dt by
(
1 with probability λ dt
(2) dNt =
0 with probability 1 − λ dt
This causes a discrete jump (once it occurs),
because the size does not depend on dt (the
size can be a random variable as in the pre-
vious example).

16
Poisson process has the following properties:
(1) During a small interval h, at most one
event occurs with probability ≈ 1.
(2) The information up to time t does not
help to predict the occurrence of the event
in the next instant.
(3) Events occur at a constant rate λ.

Remark 3.2: Within any time interval [t, t + h], ∆Nt+h =


Nt+h − Nt has the Poisson distribution
(λh)k λh
(3) P (∆Nt+h = k) = e , k = 0, 1, . . .
k!
(4) E[∆Nt+h] = λh = Var[∆Nt+h].
However, if h is small
(5) P (∆Nt+h = 1) = (λh)e−λh ≈ λh

as stated above. We denote ∆Nt+h ∼ Po(λh). Thus


because N0 = 0, we have in the previous example
Nt ∼ Po(λt).

17

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