Abstract

Using a range of stochastic volatility models well-known in the nance literature, we study the existence of money market bubbles in the US economy. Money market bubbles preclude the existence of a risk-neutral pricing measure. Understanding whether markets exhibit money market bubbles is crucial from the point of view of derivative pricing since their existence implies the existence of a self-financing trading strategy that replicates the savings account's value at a fixed future date at a cheaper cost than the current value of the savings account. The benchmark approach is formulated under the real world probability measure and does not require the existence of a risk neutral probability measure. It hence emerges as the appropriate framework to study the potential existence of money market bubbles. Testing the existence of money market bubbles in the US economy we nd that for all models the US market exhibits a money market bubble. This conclusion suggests that for derivative pricing and hedging care should be taken when making assumptions pertaining to the existence of a risk-neutral probability measure. Less expensive hedge portfolios may exist for a wide range of derivatives.

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