15-ArbPric-ContState/Time Page 461 Wednesday, February 4, 2004 1:08 PM
Arbitrage Pricing: Continuous-State, Continuous-Time Models 461
The Diffusion Invariance Principle
Note that Girsanov’s Theorem requires neither that the process X be a
martingale nor that Q be an equivalent martingale measure. If X is
indeed a martingale under Q, an implication of Girsanov’s Theorem is
the diffusion invariance principle which can be stated as follows. Let X
be an Itô process:
dXt = μtdt + σtdBt
If X is a martingale with respect to an equivalent probability measure Q,
then there is a standard Brownian motion Bˆ
T in R
D under Q such that
dXt = σtdBˆt
Let’s now apply the previous results to a price process X = (V,S^1 ,...,SN–1)
where
dSt = μtdt + σtdBt
and
dVt = rtVtdt
If the short-term rate r is bounded, V–^1
t is a regular deflator. Con-
sider the deflated processes:
Zt = StVt
- 1
By Itô’s lemma, this process satisfies the following stochastic equation:
μt σt
dZt = –rtZt + ------ dt + ------dBt
Vt Vt
Suppose there is an equivalent martingale measure Q. Under the
equivalent martingale measure Q, the discounted price process
Zt = StVt
- 1
is a martingale. In addition, by the diffusion invariance principle there is
a standard Brownian motion Bˆt in RD under Q such that: