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Itô's lemma

In mathematics, Itô's lemma is used in stochastic calculus to find the differential of a function of a particular type of stochastic process. It is therefore to stochastic calculus what the chain rule is to ordinary calculus. The lemma is widely employed in mathematical finance.

Contents

Statement of the lemma

Let x(t) be an Itô (or generalized Wiener) process. That is let

dx(t) = a(x,t)\,dt + b(x,t)\,dW_t

and let f be some function with a second derivative that is continuous.

Then:

f(x(t)) is also an Itô process.
df(x(t),t) = \left( a(x,t)\frac{\partial f}{\partial x} + \frac{\partial f}{\partial t} + \frac{b(x,t)*b(x,t)* \frac{\partial^2f}{\partial x^2}}{2} \right) dt + b(x,t)\frac{\partial f}{dx}\,dW_t

Informal proof

A formal proof of the lemma requires us to take the limit of a sequence of random variables, which is not handled carefully here.

Expanding f(x, t) is a Taylor series in x and t we have

df = \frac{\partial f}{\partial x}\,dx + \frac{\partial f}{\partial t}\,dt + \frac{1}{2}\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x^2}\,dx^2+ \cdots

and substituting in for dx from above we have

df = \frac{\partial f}{\partial x}(a\,dt + b\,dW_t) + \frac{\partial f}{\partial t}\,dt + \frac{1}{2}\frac{\partial^2 f}{\partial x^2}(a^2(dt)^2 + 2.a.b\,dt\,dW + b^2(dW^2))+ \cdots

In the limit as dt tends to 0 the dt2 and dt dW terms disappear but the dW2 tends to dt. The latter can be shown if we prove that

dW^2 = E\left(dW^2\right), as E\left(dW^2\right) = dt.

The proof of this statistical property is however beyond the scope of this article.

Substituting this dt in, and reordering the terms so that the dt and dW terms are collected we obtain

df = \left( a\frac{\partial f}{\partial x} + \frac{\partial f}{\partial t} + \frac{b*b*\frac{\partial^2f}{\partial x^2}}{2}\right) dt + b\frac{\partial f}{dx}\,dW_t

as required.

The formal proof, which is not included in this article, requires defining the stochastic integral , which is an advanced concept in between functional analysis and probability theory.

See also

External links

Last updated: 06-01-2005 17:40:27
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