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Fractional Differo-Integral Calculus: towards a Theory of Fractal Financial Laws Marco CORAZZA Department of Applied Mathematics University "Ca' Foscari" of Venice (Italy) Carla NARDELLI Department of Studies on Resources, Firm, Environment, and Quantitative Methodologies University of Messina (Italy) 1. Introduction Since the pioneer works of Bachelier and Working, the classical approach concerning the analysis of the financial asset returns has been characterized by the assumptions of independent and identical distribution of probability for the random variables ln Pt t ln Pt , with t 0, 1, , N t , where P t is the financial asset price at time t. In particular, in the modern economic-financial theories (like, for instance, the one on the impossibility of making arbitrage, and the one on the derivative pricing) the specific hypothesis of independent probability distribution has became a paradigm. Nevertheless, an increasing number of empirical analysis has well set in evidence the partial inadequacy of the assumption of the latter hypothesis, because of the constant presences of auto-dependence both in the short-middle term and in the long one. Starting from these peculiarities, several Authors have rejected the hypothesis of efficiency in the weak form for the financial markets and They have conjectured the non markovianity for the stochastic processes generating the variations of the financial asset prices. Such empirical results have favored an increasing interest towards the stochastic processes known as "fractional Brownian motions" because of their capability of representing Gaussian stochastic processes whose generic increases are stocastically dependent one each other. In approximative terms, such stochastic processes can be 1 interpreted as a properly weighted summation of the past realizations of a standard Brownian motion; it is possible to formalize as follows this characterization of the fractional Brownian motion by means of the stochastic differo-integral calculus: 0 1 H 0.5 H 0.5 t s BH t s dB s H 0.5 t H 0.5 t s dB s 0 where BH t is the fractional Brownian motion at time t, with H 0, 1 , is the gamma function, and B t is the standard Brownian motion at time t. In this work we determine the financial laws following which the riskless component of a risky portfolio must evolve in order of avoid the possibility of arbitrages under the assumption following which the dynamics of the stochastic component of the same portfolio is driven by a fractional Brownian motion. More in detail, in order to describe such a dynamics of the riskless component of the considered risky portfolio, firstly, we part from the following fractional differential equation that generalizes the classical model of the compounded interest financial law: d Ct Ct , dt where 0, 1 Q is the fractional order of integro-differentiation, C is the riskless component of the immunized portfolio, and 0 is a constant, then, by means of a proprer application of the differo-integral calculus (which is sketched in the next section), we give the solution of the latter fractional differential equation, and finally, we present some deepenings concerning the role played by the arbitrary constants of this solution in order to avoid, or less, the possibility of arbitrages. 2. The solving approach: a sketch Step 0: one sets 0, 1 Q , that is 0 m n 1 , with m, n N and m and n without common divisors; then d dm n C t m n C t C t ; dt dt 2 dm n step 1: one applies the operator m n to both the terms of the differential equation, that is dt dm n dt m n dm n dm n C t dt m n dt m n Ct , dm n (first term), and by the application dt m n of the second method of Liouville (second term), one obtaines: from which, by the property of the operator d 2m n dm n m n 1 C t ; 2m n m n Ct c1 t dt dt dm n Ct Ct , and subsituting it in step 1, one step 2: recalling from step 0 that dt m n obtaines d 2m n Ct Ct c1 t m n1 ; 2m n dt step 3: iterating other n 2 times step 1-step 2, one has d m n d m n d 2m n C t n Ct mn mn 2m n dt dt dt d c j n 1 j m n t m n 1 ; dt j 1 n 1 n 1 j m n n 2 times step 4: it is possible to prove that: d n1 j m n m n 1 1 t dt n1 j m n m n n j 1 m n n j 1 t ; m n 1 n 1 j m n moreover, we define n1 j m n 1 m n n j 1 m n n j 1 ; kj t m n 1 def step 5: finally, substituing step 4 in step 3 one obtaines the following integer-order linear differential equation: n 1 dm m n n j 1 n C t C t cj k j t ; m j 1 dt step 6: the solution (that is, the fractional compounded interest rate financial law) is: Ct m ~ n 1 c c j exp j t j k j expt t 0 m n n j 1 exp y y dy , j 1 j 1 solut. of the omog. diff. eq. solution of the particular differential equation where ~ c j and c j are m n 1 arbitrary constants, and j are the solution of the equation m n 0 . 3