1,572 research outputs found
Option Pricing of Twin Assets
How to price and hedge claims on nontraded assets are becoming increasingly
important matters in option pricing theory today. The most common practice to
deal with these issues is to use another similar or "closely related" asset or
index which is traded, for hedging purposes. Implicitly, traders assume here
that the higher the correlation between the traded and nontraded assets, the
better the hedge is expected to perform. This raises the question as to how
\textquoteleft{}closely related\textquoteright{} the assets really are. In this
paper, the concept of twin assets is introduced, focusing the discussion
precisely in what does it mean for two assets to be similar. Our findings point
to the fact that, in order to have very similar assets, for example identical
twins, high correlation measures are not enough. Specifically, two basic
criteria of similarity are pointed out: i) the coefficient of variation of the
assets and ii) the correlation between assets. From here, a method to measure
the level of similarity between assets is proposed, and secondly, an option
pricing model of twin assets is developed. The proposed model allows us to
price an option of one nontraded asset using its twin asset, but this time
knowing explicitly what levels of errors we are facing. Finally, some numerical
illustrations show how twin assets behave depending upon their levels of
similarities, and how their potential differences will traduce in MAPE (mean
absolute percentage error) for the proposed option pricing model
On the Enforcement of Territorial Use Rights Regulations: A Game Theoretic Approach
Territorial Use Rights (commonly known as TURFs in the literature) consists in the allocation of fishing rights to individuals and/or groups to fish in certain geographical locations. A requisite for these communities to be granted fishing rights is the formulation of a management and exploitation plan (MEP). While thus far the literature on TURFs has been centred on the biological and technical aspects of it, to our knowledge there is no work squarely dealing with the issue of enforcement of the MEP that the community, once granted the fishing use rights, have to comply with. We formally explore this issue from an economic perspective by formulating a static game of norm compliance in a regime of common property resource exploitation. The key characteristic of this game is a monitoring and sanctioning mechanism, where fishermen monitor and sanction one another. We found that in the absence of any endogenous regulation from the part of the fishing community, TURFs can not avoid the economic overexploitation of the fishery. We discuss the importance of economic incentives (and disincentives) in the formulation of endogenous regulations aimed at ensuring compliance of the MEP. Our results on the relevance of economic incentives in the context of a TURF regulation can also be used to highlight the importance of less conventional enforcement tools.Territorial Use Rights, Enforcement, Game Theory, Chile
Zero Jordan product determined Banach algebras
A Banach algebra is said to be a zero Jordan product determined Banach
algebra if every continuous bilinear map , where
is an arbitrary Banach space, which satisfies whenever
, are such that , is of the form
for some continuous linear map . We show
that all -algebras and all group algebras of amenable locally
compact groups have this property, and also discuss some applications
SPECIFIC INHIBITION OF LYMPHOID COMPLEMENT RECEPTORS BY ANTI-H-2 SERA: EVIDENCE FOR A NEW H-2 LINKED POLYMORPHISM
Certain anti-H-2 sera contain an antibody-like activity which specifically inhibits EAC rosette formation by lymphoid (and not myeloid) cells of certain mouse strains. Studies in congenic recombinant mouse strains strongly indicate that at least part of the control of susceptibility to inhibition by these antisera is mediated by H-2 linked genes, mapping in the I-C subregion or the S region. The strain distribution of the trait CRIS indicates that certain H-2 identical mice behave differently from one another, pointing toward a component of non-H-2 modulation of the H-2 linked gene (or to a previously unsuspected H-2 difference). Positive sera were usually raised across differences in the D end of the H-2 complex. The complex implications of this system must be considered in the light of known S region involvement in complement metabolism.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/73055/1/j.1744-313X.1975.tb00549.x.pd
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