2008
DOI: 10.1214/08-aap517
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Reflected and doubly reflected BSDEs with jumps: A priori estimates and comparison

Abstract: It is now established that under quite general circumstances, including in models with jumps, the existence of a solution to a reflected BSDE is guaranteed under mild conditions, whereas the existence of a solution to a doubly reflected BSDE is essentially equivalent to the so-called Mokobodski condition. As for uniqueness of solutions, this holds under mild integrability conditions. However, for practical purposes, existence and uniqueness are not enough. In order to further develop these results in Markovian… Show more

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Cited by 102 publications
(103 citation statements)
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“…SinceȲ τ ∧h ≥ R τ ∧h andK τ ∧h −K t ≥ 0, the comparison principle for BSDEs with jumps (combine, e.g., the proofs of Theorem 4.2 of [12] and Theorem 5.1…”
Section: Rbsdes With Jumpsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SinceȲ τ ∧h ≥ R τ ∧h andK τ ∧h −K t ≥ 0, the comparison principle for BSDEs with jumps (combine, e.g., the proofs of Theorem 4.2 of [12] and Theorem 5.1…”
Section: Rbsdes With Jumpsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…RBSDEs have been proven to be the powerful tools in mathematical finance (see e.g. [2], [11]), the mixed game problems (see e.g. [3], [16]), providing a probabilistic formula for the viscosity solution of an obstacle problem for a class of parabolic PDEs (see e.g.…”
Section: Z(s) Dw (S) Y (T) ≥ S(t)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…• the state process Θ is a real-valued, F-adapted, càdlàg process, For various specifications of the present set-up and sets of technical assumptions ensuring the existence and uniqueness of a solution to (E), we refer the reader to [10,16,5,11]. Basically, for the data in suitable spaces of square-integrable processes and random variables, and allowing for jumps of L and U (at totally inaccessible F -stopping times, see Recall that a quasimartingale Y can equivalently be defined as a difference of two non-negative supermartingales, or in terms of a bound on some conditionally expected variations of Y on arbitrary partitions of [0, T ], or as a special semimartingale with predictable finite variation component of integrable variation (Protter [24, Chapter III, section 4]).…”
Section: Definition 25 By a Solution To (E) We Mean A Triplet (θ Mmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Basically, for the data in suitable spaces of square-integrable processes and random variables, and allowing for jumps of L and U (at totally inaccessible F -stopping times, see Recall that a quasimartingale Y can equivalently be defined as a difference of two non-negative supermartingales, or in terms of a bound on some conditionally expected variations of Y on arbitrary partitions of [0, T ], or as a special semimartingale with predictable finite variation component of integrable variation (Protter [24, Chapter III, section 4]). In particular, any square integrable Itô-Lévy process S (Itô-Lévy process with square integrable special semimartingale decomposition components), or S ∨ for any such process S and constant , is a quasimartingale (see Crépey and Matoussi [10]). Hence the Mokobodski condition is satisfied, and the existence of a solution for (E) holds, whenever L and/or U is given by S or S ∨ for such an Itô-Lévy process S, as it is the case in many practical applications (see [10,5]).…”
Section: Definition 25 By a Solution To (E) We Mean A Triplet (θ Mmentioning
confidence: 99%
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