In mathematical finance, a risk-neutral measure (also called an equilibrium measure, or equivalent martingale measure) is a probability measure such that each share price is exactly equal to the discounted expectation of the share price under this measure. This is heavily used in the pricing of financial derivatives due to the fundamental theorem of asset pricing, which implies that in a complete market, a derivative's price is the discounted expected value of the future payoff under the unique risk-neutral measure.[1] Such a measure exists if and only if the market is arbitrage-free.

A risk-neutral measure is a probability measure

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The easiest way to remember what the risk-neutral measure is, or to explain it to a probability generalist who might not know much about finance, is to realize that it is:

  1. The probability measure of a transformed random variable. Typically this transformation is the utility function of the payoff. The risk-neutral measure would be the measure corresponding to an expectation of the payoff with a linear utility.
  2. An implied probability measure, that is one implied from the current observable/posted/traded prices of the relevant instruments. Relevant means those instruments that are causally linked to the events in the probability space under consideration (i.e. underlying prices plus derivatives), and
  3. It is the implied probability measure (solves a kind of inverse problem) that is defined using a linear (risk-neutral) utility in the payoff, assuming some known model for the payoff. This means that you try to find the risk-neutral measure by solving the equation where current prices are the expected present value of the future pay-offs under the risk-neutral measure. The concept of a unique risk-neutral measure is most useful when one imagines making prices across a number of derivatives that would make a unique risk-neutral measure, since it implies a kind of consistency in one's hypothetical untraded prices, and theoretically points to arbitrage opportunities in markets where bid/ask prices are visible.

It is also worth noting that in most introductory applications in finance, the pay-offs under consideration are deterministic given knowledge of prices at some terminal or future point in time. This is not strictly necessary to make use of these techniques.

Motivating the use of risk-neutral measures

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Prices of assets depend crucially on their risk as investors typically demand more profit for bearing more risk. Therefore, today's price of a claim on a risky amount realised tomorrow will generally differ from its expected value. Most commonly, investors are risk-averse and today's price is below the expectation, remunerating those who bear the risk.

It turns out that in a complete market with no arbitrage opportunities there is an alternative way to do this calculation: Instead of first taking the expectation and then adjusting for an investor's risk preference, one can adjust, once and for all, the probabilities of future outcomes such that they incorporate all investors' risk premia, and then take the expectation under this new probability distribution, the risk-neutral measure. The main benefit stems from the fact that once the risk-neutral probabilities are found, every asset can be priced by simply taking the present value of its expected payoff. Note that if we used the actual real-world probabilities, every security would require a different adjustment (as they differ in riskiness).

The absence of arbitrage is crucial for the existence of a risk-neutral measure. In fact, by the fundamental theorem of asset pricing, the condition of no-arbitrage is equivalent to the existence of a risk-neutral measure. Completeness of the market is also important because in an incomplete market there are a multitude of possible prices for an asset corresponding to different risk-neutral measures. It is usual to argue that market efficiency implies that there is only one price (the "law of one price"); the correct risk-neutral measure to price which must be selected using economic, rather than purely mathematical, arguments.

A common mistake is to confuse the constructed probability distribution with the real-world probability. They will be different because in the real-world, investors demand risk premia, whereas it can be shown that under the risk-neutral probabilities all assets have the same expected rate of return, the risk-free rate (or short rate) and thus do not incorporate any such premia. The method of risk-neutral pricing should be considered as many other useful computational tools—convenient and powerful, even if seemingly artificial.

Definition

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Equivalent martingale measure

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Let   be a d-dimensional market representing the price processes of the risky assets,   the risk-free bond and   the underlying probability space. Then a measure   is called an equivalent (local) martingale measure if

  1.  , i.e.,   is equivalent to  ,
  2. the processes   are (local) martingales w.r.t.    .[2]

Risk-neutral measure

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Risk-neutral measures make it easy to express the value of a derivative in a formula. Suppose at a future time   a derivative (e.g., a call option on a stock) pays   units, where   is a random variable on the probability space describing the market. Further suppose that the discount factor from now (time zero) until time   is  . Then today's fair value of the derivative is

 

where any martingale measure   that solves the equation is a risk-neutral measure.

Change of measure

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This can be re-stated in terms of an alternative measure P as

 

where   is the Radon–Nikodym derivative of   with respect to  , and therefore is still a martingale.[3]

If in a financial market there is just one risk-neutral measure, then there is a unique arbitrage-free price for each asset in the market. This is the fundamental theorem of arbitrage-free pricing. If there are more such measures, then in an interval of prices no arbitrage is possible. If no equivalent martingale measure exists, arbitrage opportunities do.

In markets with transaction costs, with no numéraire, the consistent pricing process takes the place of the equivalent martingale measure. There is in fact a 1-to-1 relation between a consistent pricing process and an equivalent martingale measure.

Example 1 – Binomial model of stock prices

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Given a probability space  , consider a single-period binomial model, denote the initial stock price as   and the stock price at time 1 as   which can randomly take on possible values:   if the stock moves up, or   if the stock moves down. Finally, let   denote the risk-free rate. These quantities need to satisfy   else there is arbitrage in the market and an agent can generate wealth from nothing.[4]

A probability measure   on   is called risk-neutral if   which can be written as  . Solving for   we find that the risk-neutral probability of an upward stock movement is given by the number

 [5]

Given a derivative with payoff   when the stock price moves up and   when it goes down, we can price the derivative via

 

Example 2 – Brownian motion model of stock prices

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Suppose our economy consists of 2 assets, a stock and a risk-free bond, and that we use the Black–Scholes model. In the model the evolution of the stock price can be described by Geometric Brownian Motion:

 

where   is a standard Brownian motion with respect to the physical measure. If we define

 

Girsanov's theorem states that there exists a measure   under which   is a Brownian motion.   is known as the market price of risk. Utilizing rules within Itô calculus, one may informally differentiate with respect to   and rearrange the above expression to derive the SDE

 

Put this back in the original equation:

 

Let   be the discounted stock price given by  , then by Ito's lemma we get the SDE:

 

  is the unique risk-neutral measure for the model. The discounted payoff process of a derivative on the stock   is a martingale under  . Notice the drift of the SDE is  , the risk-free interest rate, implying risk neutrality. Since   and   are  -martingales we can invoke the martingale representation theorem to find a replicating strategy – a portfolio of stocks and bonds that pays off   at all times  .

Origin of the risk-neutral measure

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It is natural to ask how a risk-neutral measure arises in a market free of arbitrage. Somehow the prices of all assets will determine a probability measure. One explanation is given by utilizing the Arrow security. For simplicity, consider a discrete (even finite) world with only one future time horizon. In other words, there is the present (time 0) and the future (time 1), and at time 1 the state of the world can be one of finitely many states. An Arrow security corresponding to state n, An, is one which pays $1 at time 1 in state n and $0 in any of the other states of the world.

What is the price of An now? It must be positive as there is a chance you will gain $1; it should be less than $1 as that is the maximum possible payoff. Thus the price of each An, which we denote by An(0), is strictly between 0 and 1.

Actually, the sum of all the security prices must be equal to the present value of $1, because holding a portfolio consisting of each Arrow security will result in certain payoff of $1. Consider a raffle where a single ticket wins a prize of all entry fees: if the prize is $1, the entry fee will be 1/number of tickets. For simplicity, we will consider the interest rate to be 0, so that the present value of $1 is $1.

Thus the An(0)'s satisfy the axioms for a probability distribution. Each is non-negative and their sum is 1. This is the risk-neutral measure! Now it remains to show that it works as advertised, i.e. taking expected values with respect to this probability measure will give the right price at time 0.

Suppose you have a security C whose price at time 0 is C(0). In the future, in a state i, its payoff will be Ci. Consider a portfolio P consisting of Ci amount of each Arrow security Ai. In the future, whatever state i occurs, then Ai pays $1 while the other Arrow securities pay $0, so P will pay Ci. In other words, the portfolio P replicates the payoff of C regardless of what happens in the future. The lack of arbitrage opportunities implies that the price of P and C must be the same now, as any difference in price means we can, without any risk, (short) sell the more expensive, buy the cheaper, and pocket the difference. In the future we will need to return the short-sold asset but we can fund that exactly by selling our bought asset, leaving us with our initial profit.

By regarding each Arrow security price as a probability, we see that the portfolio price P(0) is the expected value of C under the risk-neutral probabilities. If the interest rate R were not zero, we would need to discount the expected value appropriately to get the price. In particular, the portfolio consisting of each Arrow security now has a present value of  , so the risk-neutral probability of state i becomes   times the price of each Arrow security Ai, or its forward price.

Note that Arrow securities do not actually need to be traded in the market. This is where market completeness comes in. In a complete market, every Arrow security can be replicated using a portfolio of real, traded assets. The argument above still works considering each Arrow security as a portfolio.

In a more realistic model, such as the Black–Scholes model and its generalizations, our Arrow security would be something like a double digital option, which pays off $1 when the underlying asset lies between a lower and an upper bound, and $0 otherwise. The price of such an option then reflects the market's view of the likelihood of the spot price ending up in that price interval, adjusted by risk premia, entirely analogous to how we obtained the probabilities above for the one-step discrete world.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Glyn A. Holton (2005). "Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing". riskglossary.com. Retrieved October 20, 2011.
  2. ^ Björk, Tomas (2004). Arbitrage theory in Continuous Time. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 136f. ISBN 978-0-19-927126-9.
  3. ^ Hans Föllmer; Alexander Schied (2004). Stochastic Finance: An Introduction in Discrete Time (2 ed.). Walter de Gruyter. p. 6. ISBN 978-3-11-018346-7.
  4. ^ Shreve, Steven E. Stochastic Calculus for Finance I The Binomial Asset Pricing Model. pp. 2–3. ISBN 978-0-387-22527-2. OCLC 1184505221.
  5. ^ Elliott, Robert James; Kopp, P. E. (2005). Mathematics of financial markets (2 ed.). Springer. pp. 48–50. ISBN 978-0-387-21292-0.
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