2
$\begingroup$

I could find any reference restricting the sign of the volatilities in the multi-factor HJM framework.

Can someone please confirm if $\sigma_i(t,T)$ can assume negative values for some $i,t$ and $T$?

$$ df(t,T) = \left(\sum_i \sigma_i(t,T)\int_t^T \sigma_i(t,u) du \right) dt + \sum_i \sigma_i(t,T) dW_i(t) $$

$\endgroup$
0

1 Answer 1

1
$\begingroup$

At first, I also could not find a single source that formally restricts $\sigma_i(t,T)$. However, the formally very precise article [1] explicitly states that the $\sigma_i(t,T)$ are assumed to be non-negative:

[...] the volatilities $\sigma_i(\cdot,\cdot,\omega_t)$ belong to $\mathcal{F}$, the set of all functions defined from ${(t, T ) : t \in [0, T ]}\times\Omega$ onto $\mathbb{R}$, that are $\mathbb{P}$-almost everywhere non-negative, bounded, square integrable on any finite time horizon, and Lipschitz continuous with respect to the second variable. Further the $\sigma_i(\cdot,\cdot,\omega_t)$ are jointly measurable from $\mathcal{B} {(t, T ) : t \in [0, T]} \times \mathcal{F}_T → \mathcal{B}$, where $\mathcal{B}$ is the Borel $\sigma$-algebra restricted to $[0, T]$.

Most references quietly assume this by stating that the $\sigma_i(t,T)$ are volatility functions.

Additionally, the volatility functions are usually modeled as a non-negative process, for example when showing its correspondence to a Hull-White model [2].

[1] Tchuindjo, L. (2009). An extended Heath–Jarrow–Morton risk-neutral drift. Applied Mathematics Letters, 22(3), 396–400.

[2] Hull-White model: match between HJM framework and short model formulation

$\endgroup$

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.