Brownian Excursions and Parisian Barrier Options
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- general applied-probability
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Advances in Applied Probability
- Vol. 29 (01) , 165-184
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s000186780002783x
Abstract
In this paper we study a new kind of option, called hereinafter a Parisian barrier option. This option is the following variant of the so-called barrier option: a down-and-out barrier option becomes worthless as soon as a barrier is reached, whereas a down-and-out Parisian barrier option is lost by the owner if the underlying asset reaches a prespecified level and remains constantly below this level for a time interval longer than a fixed number, called the window. Properties of durations of Brownian excursions play an essential role. We also study another kind of option, called here a cumulative Parisian option, which becomes worthless if the total time spent below a certain level is too long.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- PRICING AND HEDGING DOUBLE‐BARRIER OPTIONS: A PROBABILISTIC APPROACHMathematical Finance, 1996
- A Proof of Dassios' Representation of the $|alpha$-Quantile of Brownian Motion with DriftThe Annals of Applied Probability, 1995
- The Distribution of the Quantile of a Brownian Motion with Drift and the Pricing of Related Path-Dependent OptionsThe Annals of Applied Probability, 1995
- BESSEL PROCESSES, ASIAN OPTIONS, AND PERPETUITIESMathematical Finance, 1993
- Point processes, regular variation and weak convergenceAdvances in Applied Probability, 1986
- Trivariate Density of Brownian Motion, Its Local and Occupation Times, with Application to Stochastic ControlThe Annals of Probability, 1984
- The effect of excessively elastic expectations on exchange-rate volatility in the Dornbusch overshooting modelJournal of International Money and Finance, 1983
- Excursions in Brownian motionArkiv för Matematik, 1976
- Semilinear Markov processes, subordinators and renewal theoryProbability Theory and Related Fields, 1972
- The influence of the maximum term in the addition of independent random variablesTransactions of the American Mathematical Society, 1952