Abstract

We study utility indifference prices and optimal purchasing quantities for a contingent claim, in an incomplete semimartingale market, in the presence of vanishing hedging errors and/or risk aversion. Assuming that the average indifference price converges to a well-defined limit, we prove that optimally taken positions become large in absolute value at a specific rate. We draw motivation from and make connections to large deviations theory, and in particular, the celebrated Gartner–Ellis theorem. We analyze a series of well studied examples where this limiting behavior occurs, such as fixed markets with vanishing risk aversion, the basis risk model with high correlation, models of large markets with vanishing trading restrictions and the Black–Scholes–Merton model with either vanishing default probabilities or vanishing transaction costs. Lastly, we show that the large claim regime could naturally arise in partial equilibrium models.

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