VOLATILITY STABILIZATION, DIVERSITY AND ARBITRAGE IN STOCHASTIC FINANCE
Ioannis Karatzas
Columbia University
In this talk we start with an overview of the modern theory of
portfolios, based on
Stochastic Analysis. We introduce the notion of relative arbitrage and
provide simple,
easy-to-test criteria for the existence of such 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
be, structuresufficiently large". We show that conditions which
satisfy these criteria are manifestly
present in the US equity market, and construct explicit portfolios
under these conditions.
One such condition, market diversity, emerges when the volatility
structure is bounded.
We then construct examples of abstract markets in which the criteria
hold.
We study in
some detail a specific example of a non-diverse 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
and individual stocks
fluctuate widely. An interesting probabilistic structure emerges in
which time changes,
Bessel processes, and the asymptotic theory for planar Brownian
motion, play crucial
roles. Several open questions are raised for further study. (Joint
work with E. Robert
Fernholz.)



