There are two questions left about the book Term Structure: A graduate Course by Damir Filipovic, which bother me. The first one is about the Theorem, that the long rate never falls (p. 108). Why is the following equation true:
$$p(s)=\lim_{T\to\infty}E_{Q^t}[P(t,T)|\mathcal{F}_s]^{\frac{1}{T}}$$
We have that $E_{Q^t}[P(t,T)|\mathcal{F}_s]=\frac{P(s,T)}{P(s,t)}$. We know that $P(s,T)=e^{-\int_s^Tf(s,u)du}$ and $P(s,t)=e^{-\int_s^tf(s,u)du}$. Therefore
$$(\frac{P(s,T)}{P(s,t)})^{\frac{1}{T}}=e^{-\frac{1}{T}\int_t^Tf(s,u)du}$$ I know that $\int_s^Tf(s,u)du=(T-s)R(s,T)$, but why is $\int_t^Tf(s,u)du=(T-s)R(s,T)$?
The second question is about the relationship between forward and future price on page 120/121. There they have stated the following equation
$$F(t,T;S(T))=f(t,T;S(T))e^{\int_t^T(v(s,T)-\rho(s))v(s,T)ds}$$
Why does $S(t)P(t,T)\rho(t)v(t,T)\le 0$ imply that the future price dominates the forward price. Somehow I must conclude that
$$(v(s,T)-\rho(s))v(s,T)\le 0$$
But I don't see how this is possible from the above assumption.