1980
DOI: 10.1080/17442508008833156
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Some solvable stochastic control problemst

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Cited by 301 publications
(163 citation statements)
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“…A natural and rigorous formulation of this problem is a reflected diffusion process, in which the local times of the diffusion at the boundary provide the trading policy. Similar problems have been studied in [1] and [3].…”
Section: Control Limit Policiesmentioning
confidence: 83%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A natural and rigorous formulation of this problem is a reflected diffusion process, in which the local times of the diffusion at the boundary provide the trading policy. Similar problems have been studied in [1] and [3].…”
Section: Control Limit Policiesmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…For a specified utility function u(c) , an optimal (admissible) policy ( Tr,Z ) is then sought, to 7 ra-r1217-1 w1, and the optimal consumption/investment policy 1-7 1-7 2(1_1)2L a J is given by : qt)=P(4V(t)) 1 1/(1-7) = i…”
Section: (Iii) W(t)v T Asmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The admissibility condition (8) and (53) imply that the random variable on the righthand side of these inequalities has finite expectation. Combining this observation with (51), we can see that E inf T ≥0 M T > −∞.…”
Section: Theorem 1 Suppose That Assumption 1 Holds True the Value Fumentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In their seminal paper, Beneš, Shepp and Witsenhausen [8] were the first to solve rigorously an example of a finite-fuel singular control problem. Since then, the area has attracted considerable interest in the literature.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous work Singular control problems have been studied extensively in both the mathematics and economics, starting from the well-known monotone fuel follower problem, for which explicit solutions can be found in Bather and Chernoff (1967a,b); Beneš et al (1980); Karatzas (1983) and Harrison and Taksar (1983). In mathematical economics, a typical (ir)reversible investment problem can be formulated as a singular control problem in which a company, by adjusting its production capacity through expansion and contraction according to market fluctuations, wishes to maximize its overall expected net profit over an infinite horizon.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%