Novikov's condition

In probability theory, Novikov's condition is the sufficient condition for a stochastic process which takes the form of the Radon-Nikodym derivative in Girsanov's theorem to be a martingale. If satisfied together with other conditions, Girsanov's theorem may be applied to a Brownian Motion stochastic process to change from the original measure to the new measure defined by the Radon-Nikodym derivative.

This condition was suggested and proved by Professor Alexander Novikov. There are other results which may be used to show that the Radon-Nikodym derivative is a martingale, such as the more general criterion Kazamaki's condition, however Novikov Condition is the most well-known result.

Assume that  (X_t)_{0\leq t\leq T} is a real valued adapted process on the probability space  \left (\Omega, (\mathcal{F}_t), \mathbb{P}\right) and (W_t)_{0\leq t\leq T} is an adapted Brownian motion[1]:334:

If the condition

   
\mathbb{E}\left[e^{\frac12\int_0^T|X_t|^2\,dt}   \right]<\infty

is fulfilled then the process


  \ Z_t \ = e^{ -\int_0^t X_s\, dW_s  -\frac{1}{2}\int_0^t X_s^2\, ds},\quad 0\leq t\leq T

is a martingale under the probability measure \mathbb{P} and the filtration \mathcal{F}.

References

  1. ^ Pascucci, Andrea (2011) PDE and Martingale Methods in Option Pricing. Berlin: Springer-Verlag

Comments on Girsanov's Theorem by H. E. Krogstad, IMF 2003[1]