What conditions need to be hold for a nonconvex optimization problem to have a unique solution?
Specifically, I have the following minimization problem that I'd like to know whether it has a unique solution or not:
$ \min_{\bf A, B} \| {\bf Y - XAB} \|_2^2 + \lambda_1 \|{\bf A}\|_1 + \lambda_2 \|{\bf B}\|_1$
where ${\bf Y}_{n \times q}$ and ${\bf X}_{n \times p}$ are fixed, and ${\bf A}_{p \times r}$ and ${\bf B}_{r,q}$ are the variables ($r \leq \min(p,q)$).
Also, I know that this minimzation problem is convex if either ${\bf A}$ or ${\bf B}$ are fixed (and so it has a unique solution in that case).
Is there a certain relaxation that transforms this into a convex problem?