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I am dealing with the following stochastic differential equation (SDE)

$ \begin{cases} dS_t &= \mu S_t dt + \sigma_1 S_tdW^1_t\\dG_t &= kS_t(\alpha - G_t)dt + \sigma_2\sqrt{G_tS_t}dW^2_t \end{cases} $

with $W^1$ and $W^2$ two independent Brownian motions and all the other parameters positive constants. The first component is a GBM and thus remains positive at every time. I'm interested in whether or not the second one may hit zero or not and if it does, what happen. It remains there or get reflected?

I know the classic square root process $ dr_t = k(\alpha - r_t)dt + \sigma\sqrt{r_t}dW_t $ remains strictly positive if $ 2k\alpha > \sigma^2$ (Feller condition) and nonnegative if $ 0< 2k\alpha \leq \sigma^2$, zero being a reflecting state in the latter case.

The heuristic reasoning that, at $G=0$, the equation reduces to

$ dG_t= k\alpha S_t dt$

and it is thus pushed upward makes me believe that zero is a reflecting barrier also in this case but I don't know how to formalize it.

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  • $\begingroup$ I think you need the condition $\mu > \frac {\sigma_1^2} 2$. I think your process is a random time change of the usual square root process with the time change given by $A_t = \int S_t$. If that integrates to something finite you come to a halt. See, maybe, revuz & yor prop IX 1.13 $\endgroup$
    – user83457
    Commented Apr 22, 2017 at 7:08
  • $\begingroup$ Yes, you were right about the time change, thank you! $\endgroup$
    – Michelep
    Commented Apr 25, 2017 at 9:05

1 Answer 1

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A slightly less heuristic argument that agrees with your conclusion:

Let $k_t=kS_t$ and $\sigma_t=\sigma_2\sqrt{S_t}$. Then your equation is $$dG_t = k_t(\alpha-G_t)dt + \sigma_t\sqrt{G_t}dW_t$$ which looks like the classic square root process except that now $k$ and $\sigma$ are stochastic. The Feller condition $2k\alpha>\sigma^2_2$ becomes $2kS_t\alpha>\sigma_2^2S_t$, and $S_t$ cancels out, so it's the same condition as before.

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