No free lunch with vanishing risk

No free lunch with vanishing risk (NFLVR) is a concept used in mathematical finance as a strengthening of the no-arbitrage condition.

In continuous time finance the existence of an equivalent martingale measure (EMM) is no more equivalent to the no-arbitrage-condition (unlike in discrete time finance), but is instead equivalent to the NFLVR-condition.

This is known as the first fundamental theorem of asset pricing.

Informally speaking, a market allows for a free lunch with vanishing risk if there are admissible strategies, which can be chosen arbitrarily close to an arbitrage strategy, i.e., these strategies start with no wealth, end up with positive wealth with probability greater zero (free lunch) and the probability of ending up with negative wealth can be chosen arbitrarily small (vanishing risk).

[1] For a semimartingale

is said to satisfy the no free lunch with vanishing risk (NFLVR) condition if

is the closure of C in the norm topology of

[2] A direct consequence of that definition is the following: If a market does not satisfy NFLVR, then there exists

Moreover, it holds In other words, this means: There exists a sequence of admissible strategies

θ

starting with zero wealth, such that the negative part of their final values

θ

converge uniformly to zero and the probabilities of the events

θ

converge to a positive number.

is a semimartingale with values in

then S does not allow for a free lunch with vanishing risk if and only if there exists an equivalent martingale measure

such that S is a sigma-martingale under

This finance-related article is a stub.

You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.