Peacocks nearby: approximating sequences of measures
A peacock is a family of probability measures with finite mean that increases in convex order. It is a classical result, in the discrete time case due to Strassen, that any peacock is the family of one-dimensional marginals of a martingale. We study the problem whether a given sequence of probabilit...
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Zusammenfassung: | A peacock is a family of probability measures with finite mean that increases
in convex order. It is a classical result, in the discrete time case due to
Strassen, that any peacock is the family of one-dimensional marginals of a
martingale. We study the problem whether a given sequence of probability
measures can be approximated by a peacock. In our main results, the
approximation quality is measured by the infinity Wasserstein distance.
Existence of a peacock within a prescribed distance is reduced to a countable
collection of rather explicit conditions. This result has a financial
application (developed in a separate paper), as it allows to check European
call option quotes for consistency. The distance bound on the peacock than
takes the role of a bound on the bid-ask spread of the underlying. We also
solve the approximation problem for the stop-loss distance, the L\'evy
distance, and the Prokhorov distance. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1512.06640 |