721 research outputs found
Some remarks on first passage of Levy processes, the American put and pasting principles
The purpose of this article is to provide, with the help of a fluctuation
identity, a generic link between a number of known identities for the first
passage time and overshoot above/below a fixed level of a Levy process and the
solution of Gerber and Shiu [Astin Bull. 24 (1994) 195-220], Boyarchenko and
Levendorskii [Working paper series EERS 98/02 (1998), Unpublished manuscript
(1999), SIAM J. Control Optim. 40 (2002) 1663-1696], Chan [Original unpublished
manuscript (2000)], Avram, Chan and Usabel [Stochastic Process. Appl. 100
(2002) 75-107], Mordecki [Finance Stoch. 6 (2002) 473-493], Asmussen, Avram and
Pistorius [Stochastic Process. Appl. 109 (2004) 79-111] and Chesney and
Jeanblanc [Appl. Math. Fin. 11 (2004) 207-225] to the American perpetual put
optimal stopping problem. Furthermore, we make folklore precise and give
necessary and sufficient conditions for smooth pasting to occur in the
considered problem.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/105051605000000377 in the
Annals of Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute
of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Branching processes in random environment die slowly
Let be a branching process evolving in the random
environment generated by a sequence of iid generating functions and let be the
associated random walk with be
the left-most point of minimum of on the
interval and . Assuming that the
associated random walk satisfies the Doney condition we prove (under the quenched approach) conditional limit
theorems, as , for the distribution of and given . It is shown that
the form of the limit distributions essentially depends on the location of
with respect to the point $nt.
Overshoots and undershoots of L\'{e}vy processes
We obtain a new fluctuation identity for a general L\'{e}vy process giving a
quintuple law describing the time of first passage, the time of the last
maximum before first passage, the overshoot, the undershoot and the undershoot
of the last maximum. With the help of this identity, we revisit the results of
Kl\"{u}ppelberg, Kyprianou and Maller [Ann. Appl. Probab. 14 (2004) 1766--1801]
concerning asymptotic overshoot distribution of a particular class of L\'{e}vy
processes with semi-heavy tails and refine some of their main conclusions. In
particular, we explain how different types of first passage contribute to the
form of the asymptotic overshoot distribution established in the aforementioned
paper. Applications in insurance mathematics are noted with emphasis on the
case that the underlying L\'{e}vy process is spectrally one sided.Comment: Published at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/105051605000000647 in the
Annals of Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute
of Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
A Ciesielski-Taylor type identity for positive self-similar Markov processes
The aim of this note is to give a straightforward proof of a general version
of the Ciesielski-Taylor identity for positive self-similar Markov processes of
the spectrally negative type which umbrellas all previously known
Ciesielski-Taylor identities within the latter class. The approach makes use of
three fundamental features. Firstly a new transformation which maps a subset of
the family of Laplace exponents of spectrally negative L\'evy processes into
itself. Secondly some classical features of fluctuation theory for spectrally
negative L\'evy processes as well as more recent fluctuation identities for
positive self-similar Markov processes
The extended hypergeometric class of L\'evy processes
With a view to computing fluctuation identities related to stable processes,
we review and extend the class of hypergeometric L\'evy processes explored in
Kuznetsov and Pardo (arXiv:1012.0817). We give the Wiener-Hopf factorisation of
a process in the extended class, and characterise its exponential functional.
Finally, we give three concrete examples arising from transformations of stable
processes.Comment: 22 page
Traveling waves and homogeneous fragmentation
We formulate the notion of the classical
Fisher-Kolmogorov-Petrovskii-Piscounov (FKPP) reaction diffusion equation
associated with a homogeneous conservative fragmentation process and study its
traveling waves. Specifically, we establish existence, uniqueness and
asymptotics. In the spirit of classical works such as McKean [Comm. Pure Appl.
Math. 28 (1975) 323-331] and [Comm. Pure Appl. Math. 29 (1976) 553-554], Neveu
[In Seminar on Stochastic Processes (1988) 223-242 Birkh\"{a}user] and Chauvin
[Ann. Probab. 19 (1991) 1195-1205], our analysis exposes the relation between
traveling waves and certain additive and multiplicative martingales via laws of
large numbers which have been previously studied in the context of
Crump-Mode-Jagers (CMJ) processes by Nerman [Z. Wahrsch. Verw. Gebiete 57
(1981) 365-395] and in the context of fragmentation processes by Bertoin and
Martinez [Adv. in Appl. Probab. 37 (2005) 553-570] and Harris, Knobloch and
Kyprianou [Ann. Inst. H. Poincar\'{e} Probab. Statist. 46 (2010) 119-134]. The
conclusions and methodology presented here appeal to a number of concepts
coming from the theory of branching random walks and branching Brownian motion
(cf. Harris [Proc. Roy. Soc. Edinburgh Sect. A 129 (1999) 503-517] and Biggins
and Kyprianou [Electr. J. Probab. 10 (2005) 609-631]) showing their
mathematical robustness even within the context of fragmentation theory.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-AAP733 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
- …