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Showing papers by "Ioannis Karatzas published in 2005"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the basic properties of Atlas-type models are studied, as well as the behavior of various portfolios in their midst, including portfolios that do not contain the Atlas stock.
Abstract: Atlas-type models are constant-parameter models of uncorrelated stocks for equity markets with a stable capital distribution, in which the growth rates and variances depend on rank. The simplest such model assigns the same, constant variance to all stocks; zero rate of growth to all stocks but the smallest; and positive growth rate to the smallest, the Atlas stock. In this paper we study the basic properties of this class of models, as well as the behavior of various portfolios in their midst. Of particular interest are portfolios that do not contain the Atlas stock.

180 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide simple, easy-to-test criteria for the existence of relative arbitrage in equity markets, and then construct examples of abstract markets in which the criteria hold.
Abstract: We provide simple, easy-to-test criteria for the existence of relative arbitrage in equity markets. These criteria postulate essentially that the excess growth rate of the market portfolio, a positive quantity that can be estimated or even computed from a given market structure, be ‘‘sufficiently large’’. We show that conditions which satisfy these criteria are manifestly present in the U.S. equity market. We then construct examples of abstract markets in which the criteria hold. These abstract markets allow us to isolate conditions similar to those prevalent in actual markets, and to construct explicit portfolios under these conditions. We study in some detail a specific example of an abstract market which is volatility-stabilized, in that the return from the market portfolio has constant drift and variance rates while the smallest stocks are assigned the largest volatilities. A rather interesting probabilistic structure emerges, in which time changes and the asymptotic theory for planar Brownian motion play crucial roles. The largest stock and the overall market grow at the same, constant rate, though individual stocks fluctuate widely.

133 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that weakly-diverse markets contain relative arbitrage opportunities: it is possible to outperform or underperform such markets over any given time-horizon, and the existence of this type ofrelative arbitrage does not interfere with the development of contingent claim valuation.
Abstract: An equity market is called “diverse” if no single stock is ever allowed to dominate the entire market in terms of relative capitalization. In the context of the standard Ito-process model initiated by Samuelson (1965) we formulate this property (and the allied, successively weaker notions of “weak diversity” and “asymptotic weak diversity”) in precise terms. We show that diversity is possible to achieve, but delicate. Several examples are provided which illustrate these notions and show that weakly-diverse markets contain relative arbitrage opportunities: it is possible to outperform or underperform such markets over any given time-horizon. The existence of this type of relative arbitrage does not interfere with the development of contingent claim valuation, and has consequences for the pricing of long-term warrants and for put-call parity. Several open questions are suggested for further study.

98 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors solve the standard Poisson disorder problem completely and describe efficient numerical methods to calculate the policy parameters, which are then used for online change detection procedures in a Poisson process.

66 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The game approach to the theory of optimal stopping assumes two players, the controller and the stopper, and the reward of the game is a nonnegative process Y with RCLL paths on a time-horizon [0,T].
Abstract: The game approach to the theory of optimal stopping assumes two players, the “controller” and the “stopper”. The reward of the game is a nonnegative process Y with RCLL paths on a time-horizon [0,T...

41 citations


Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, conditions for the existence of a stationary Markovian equilibrium when total production or total endowment is a random variable are described, and when these conditions hold, there is a stationary equilibrium.
Abstract: We describe conditions for the existence of a stationary Markovian equilibrium when total production or total endowment is a random variable. Apart from regularity assumptions, there are two crucial conditions: (i) low information—agents are ignorant of both total endowment and their own endowments when they make decisions in a given period, and (ii) proportional endowments—the endowment of each agent is in proportion, possibly random, to the total endowment. When these conditions hold, there is a stationary equilibrium. When they do not hold, such an equilibrium need not exist.