arXiv Analytics

Sign in

arXiv:2409.04207 [math.PR]AbstractReferencesReviewsResources

Probabilistic Representation for Viscosity Solutions to Double-Obstacle Quasi-Variational Inequalities

Magnus Perninge

Published 2024-09-06Version 1

We prove the existence and uniqueness of viscosity solutions to quasi-variational inequalities (QVIs) with both upper and lower obstacles. In contrast to most previous works, we allow all involved coefficients to depend on the state variable and do not assume any type of monotonicity. It is well known that double obstacle QVIs are related to zero-sum games of impulse control, and our existence result is derived by considering a sequence of such games. Full generality is obtained by allowing one player in the game to randomize their control. A by-product of our result is that the corresponding zero-sum game has a value, which is a direct consequence of viscosity comparison. Utilizing recent results for backward stochastic differential equations (BSDEs), we find that the unique viscosity solution to our QVI is related to optimal stopping of BSDEs with constrained jumps and, in particular, to the corresponding non-linear Snell envelope. This gives a new probabilistic representation for double obstacle QVIs. It should be noted that we consider the min-max version (or equivalently the max-min version); however, the conditions under which solutions to the min-max and max-min versions coincide remain unknown and is a topic left for future work.

Comments: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2402.17541, arXiv:2210.02417
Categories: math.PR, math.OC
Related articles: Most relevant | Search more
arXiv:2401.04276 [math.PR] (Published 2024-01-08)
Ruin problems with investments on a finite interval: PIDEs and their viscosity solutions
arXiv:1503.02169 [math.PR] (Published 2015-03-07)
Perron's method for viscosity solutions of semilinear path dependent PDEs
arXiv:1106.1144 [math.PR] (Published 2011-06-06, updated 2012-02-19)
Note on Viscosity Solution of Path-Dependent PDE and G-Martingales