Derives a generalized European option pricing PDE from an operational-time log-price lattice with state-dependent transitions that converges to the Black-Scholes-Merton PDE under risk-neutral drift and constant volatility.
Non-unique time and market incompleteness
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
Financial markets are often modelled as if time were unique and continuous across assets and markets. Financial markets are however asynchronous, order flow is event-driven, and waiting times between events are often random. Many of the most influential formulations of financial market models presuppose a unique global calendar time and advocate for this or that preferred single latent continuous-time price system. Here we critically contrast these assumptions with event-time, renewal, point-process, and order-flow descriptions. We revisit no-arbitrage, no-dynamic-arbitrage, and risk-neutral option pricing in settings where the market is represented as a discrete event system and where the continuum limit of a discrete-time random walk need not be unique. The central suggestion is then that such non-uniqueness points to a more foundational form of market incompleteness than is usually emphasized. This highlights the importance of operational time at the level of decision making but reminds market practitioners that managing risk itself often requires reconciling operational time with a global calendar time. At these longer time scales forms of effective or average completeness may still emerge at lower frequencies and remain useful for portfolio construction and risk management, even if high-frequency hedging and execution expose a clock mismatch between trading, pricing, and longer-horizon allocation.
years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
A coupled reaction-diffusion model of order books yields the LMF trade-sign long memory and square-root meta-order impact, reinterpreted as event-time versus physical-time statements with subordination effects.
citing papers explorer
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Option prices from operational-time reaction-boundary lattices
Derives a generalized European option pricing PDE from an operational-time log-price lattice with state-dependent transitions that converges to the Black-Scholes-Merton PDE under risk-neutral drift and constant volatility.
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Revisiting Trade-sign Long-memory and Square-root Law price impact
A coupled reaction-diffusion model of order books yields the LMF trade-sign long memory and square-root meta-order impact, reinterpreted as event-time versus physical-time statements with subordination effects.