Self-financing portfolio

In financial mathematics, a self-financing portfolio is a portfolio having the feature that, if there is no exogenous infusion or withdrawal of money, the purchase of a new asset must be financed by the sale of an old one.

Mathematical definition

Let denote the number of shares of stock number 'i' in the portfolio at time , and the price of stock number 'i' in a frictionless market with trading in continuous time. Let

Then the portfolio is self-financing if

[1]

Discrete time

Assume we are given a discrete filtered probability space , and let be the solvency cone (with or without transaction costs) at time t for the market. Denote by . Then a portfolio (in physical units, i.e. the number of each stock) is self-financing (with trading on a finite set of times only) if

for all we have that with the convention that .[2]

If we are only concerned with the set that the portfolio can be at some future time then we can say that .

If there are transaction costs then only discrete trading should be considered, and in continuous time then the above calculations should be taken to the limit such that .

gollark: ¥E§, except the ☭ bit.
gollark: But they'll be convinced they were infolased, and that will mean they will experience infolasing effects.
gollark: If people think "oh no an infolaser" and you "infolase" them, then they might feel infolasing effects.
gollark: Joke's on you, the pencils CAN infolase people!
gollark: Do you want me to infolase YOU with inability to know about infolasers?

See also

References

  1. Björk, Tomas (2009). Arbitrage theory in continuous time (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 87. ISBN 978-0-19-877518-8.
  2. Hamel, Andreas; Heyde, Frank; Rudloff, Birgit (November 30, 2010). "Set-valued risk measures for conical market models". arXiv:1011.5986v1. Bibcode:2010arXiv1011.5986H. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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