A Stochastic String with a Compound Poisson Process

We investigate a compound Poisson infinite factor diffusion model which describes the relationship between the infinite-dimension random risk resource and the corresponding stochastic process. We derive the no-arbitrage condition on the drift of instantaneous forward rates in the compound model and study the impact of random jump on the price of the zero-coupon bond.


Introduction
In the study of the stochastic process, the expansion from single-factor model to multiple-factor model greatly improves its capability to describe the dynamic properties. For the term structure of interest rates, multiple-factor expansion enables itself to more flexibly describe the relationship between different maturities and their corresponding risk-free interest rates. The term structure curve contains rich information about the economy status and financial markets. The literatures have witted extensive researches on this topic for recent decades. For instance, the HJM model in [1,2] provides insight about arbitrage-free condition of the shift and volatility of the dynamic process of forward interest rates under the risk-free condition. Kennedy [3,4], Goldstein [5], and Santa-Clara and Didier [6] model each time-to-maturity forward rate driven by its own shock termed Brown Sheet, Random Field, or Stochastic String. In fact, the models in [3][4][5][6] expand the multiple-factor model to infinite stochastic factor with imperfect correlation among different maturities. At the same time, the correlations are not confined by the function form of volatilities. These results display greater variability in the correlation between different maturities.
In this paper, according to the stochastic string model presented in [6], we introduce a compound Poisson process with a constant jump intensity and random jump size to capture information burst and resulting discontinuous path. We derive the no-arbitrage condition in the compound Poisson infinite-dimensional diffusion process in which the drift and volatility of stochastic process under the risk-neutral measure are satisfied. Some of the results in [6] are extended.
The paper is organized as follows. Section 2 reviews the single-factor, multiple-factor model and stochastic string model, which are related to our study. In Section 3, we add a random jump process in the stochastic string model discussed in [6] and analyze its dynamic properties. An application of our main result is presented in Section 4.
where the process ( ) denotes the market price of risk at time . Using Itô's formula, we calculate the dynamics of bond prices as Under the no-arbitrage condition, the instantaneous forward rate of time-to-maturity is where In fact, every term structure model driven by Brownian motion is a special case of the HJM model (e.g., the Vasicek model in [7], the Hull-White model in [8], etc.). However, the single-factor HJM model has a limitation that different time-to-maturities are completely correlated; that is, their correlation coefficient equals 1. This implies that (1) the term structure curve would parallel shift which limits its capability to generate richer class of dynamics and shapes of the term structure of interest rates, (2) it does not permit consistency with term structure innovation along with the time.
One way to extend the model is by introducing thedimensional Brownian motion to the term structure model written by One can obtain the correlation of the forward rate curve driven by the -dimensional Brownian motion as Different from the multiple-factor HJM model in (7), which implies all assets shocked by the common factors, Santa-Clara and Didier [6] model the forward rate as a stochastic string and allow each forward rate to be driven by its own random risk resource. Assume that the dynamics of the instantaneous forward rates at with time-to-maturity ( > 0) is modeled by where ( , ) is a generalization of Brownian motion which depends on both time and time-to-maturity . The notation () means that the increment is taken with respect to time . Equation (9) is not the infinite-dimensional simple generalization of the multifactor HJM model, in which all forward rates are subject to the same (possibly infinite) set of Brownian motion shocks. In this model, there is one different stochastic shock for each time-to-maturity. Given time-tomaturity , the stochastic perturbation ( , ) is a standard Wiener process, which satisfies several requirements (see [6] for details). For example, the correlation coefficient matrix is positive semidefinite, which means that, for all functions ℎ( ) in 2 and for some large enough constant , The no-arbitrage condition of the drift of instantaneous forward rate is The solution of the stochastic differential equation for instantaneous forward interest rate is where Under the arbitrage-free condition, we have where Abstract and Applied Analysis 3 The covariance of different time-to-maturity zero-coupon bond yields is ) . (16)

Compound Poisson Infinite-Dimensional Diffusion Process
Information burst, some emergency events, crises, and monetary target adjustment may cause the return and price of asset jump. There are more and more empirical lines of evidence which show that the interest rate models should incorporate the jump risk. The difference of the asset price of continuous path will disappear as the change of time converges to zero. We know that in the jump model, the difference does not converge to zero, although its probability of jump occurrence will converge to 0. Eberlein et al. [9] investigate the term structure models driven by Lévy processes. Based on the continuous path of instantaneous forward rate used in Santa-Clara and Didier [6] and other works [3][4][5], we introduce a compound Poisson process to capture the yield curve jump. For each time-to-maturity , assume that the dynamics of instantaneous forward rate is where ( ) is a compound Poisson process and ( ) = ∑ ( )

=1
. Poisson process ( ) counts the number of jumps that occur at or before time .
Applying the decomposition theorem of a compound Poisson process (see [10]), ( ) = ∑ ( ) =1 may be rewritten as ( ) = ∑ =1 ( ). So, we can rewrite the dynamics of instantaneous forward rates as where ( , ) is the same random risk resource as defined in (9). Assume that the market is complete, so that the existence and uniqueness of the risk market price are guaranteed. It can be proved that the continuous part of random risk factor is independent of the jump risk factor.
For the continuous risk resource part, definẽ The correlation coefficient for different time-to-maturity random risk resourcẽ( , ) is the same as that of ( , ). For fixed time-to-maturity , let  (24) Applying jump process Itô's formula (see [10]), we have Rearranging (29), we obtain the arbitrage-free condition of (22). It completes the proof.
which is the arbitrage-free condition presented in [6]. Moreover, for arbitrary time-to-maturity and , if ( , ) = 1, and let ∫ Denote Then, we have Notice that as the length of time interval converges to 0, there is at most one jump in each time interval. Combining (37) with (38), we obtain Therefore, (34) is the solution of (26). It completes the proof.

Application
The compound Poisson infinite diffusion model developed in Section 3 comprises the traditional jump-diffusion model. We consider that the jump sizes are discrete random variables. It is convenient to introduce the continuous jump size model whose size is, for instance, normally distributed random variable.
We consider the price of the short-term interest rate futures. Assume that the financial market is shocked by two kinds of random risk resource: one is continuous risk factor of ( , ) and the other is a compound Poisson process. Assume that the market is complete. Consider a futures contract maturity at , < < , whose underlying asset is the zerocoupon bond maturity at . Denote the futures price at time as ( , , ). Under the risk-neutral measurẽ, the futures price ( , , ) is a martingale. We have (40)