Published January 1, 2009
| Version v1
Journal article
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Pricing American Perpetual Warrants by Linear Programming
Creators
- 1. Princeton Univ, Dept Operat Res & Financial Engn, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA
- 2. Bilkent Univ, Dept Ind Engn, TR-06800 Ankara, Turkey
Description
A warrant is an option that entities the holder to purchase shares of a common stock at some prespecified price during a specified interval. The problem of pricing a perpetual warrant (with no specified interval) of the American type (that can be exercised any time) is one of the earliest contingent claim pricing problems in mathematical economics. The problem was first solved by Samuelson and McKean in 1965 tinder the assumption of a geometric Brownian motion of the stock price process. It is a well-documented exercise in stochastic processes and continuous-time finance curricula. The present paper offers a solution to this time-honored problem from an optimization point of view using linear programming duality under a simple random walk assumption for the stock price process, thus enabling a classroom exposition of the problem in graduate courses on linear programming without assuming a background in stochastic processes.
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