Let $\pi$ be the joint law of $(X, Y)$ with marginal distributions $\mu$ and $\nu$. We assume that we have: for all $A \in \mathcal{B}(\mathbb{R})$ such that $\mu(A) > 0$
$$ \nu\left(\{y \in \mathbb{R} : \pi_{Y=y}(A) = 1\}\right) > 0. $$ where $\pi_{Y=y}$ is the conditional law of $X$ given $Y=y$. I am asking if necessarily:
- $\nu\left(\{y \in \mathbb{R} : \pi_{Y=y} \text{ is a Dirac measure}\}\right) > 0$,
- More precisely, if for all $A \in \mathcal{B}(\mathbb{R})$ such that $\mu(A) > 0$:
$$ \nu\left(\{y \in \mathbb{R} : \pi_{Y=y}(A) = 1 \text{ and } \pi_{Y=y} \text{ is a Dirac measure}\}\right) > 0. $$
I am unable to prove this or find any counterexample. Thank you very much for your help.