Next Article in Journal
Multivariable Fractional-Order Controller Design for a Nonlinear Dual-Tank Device
Previous Article in Journal
Grey Time Power Model with Caputo Fractional Derivative
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Well-Posedness of Backward Stochastic Differential Equations with Jumps and Irregular Coefficients

Department of Mathematics, College of Science, King Saud University, P.O. Box 2455, Riyadh 11451, Saudi Arabia
Fractal Fract. 2024, 8(1), 26; https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract8010026
Submission received: 19 November 2023 / Revised: 16 December 2023 / Accepted: 22 December 2023 / Published: 29 December 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Stochastic Dynamics for SDE or SPDE with Fractional Brownian Motion)

Abstract

:
In this paper, we focus on investigating the well-posedness of backward stochastic differential equations with jumps (BSDEJs) driven by irregular coefficients. We establish new results regarding the existence and uniqueness of solutions for a specific class of singular BSDEJs. Unlike previous studies, our approach considers terminal data that are square-integrable, eliminating the need for them to be necessarily bounded. The generators in our study encompass a standard drift, a signed measure across the entire real line, and the local time of the unknown process. This broadens the scope to include BSDEJs with quadratic growth in the Brownian component and exponential growth concerning the jump noise. The key methodology involves establishing Krylov-type estimates for a subset of solutions to irregular BSDEJs and subsequently proving the Tanaka-Krylov formula. Additionally, we employ a space transformation technique to simplify the initial BSDEJs, leading to a standard form without singular terms. We also provide various examples and special cases, shedding light on BSDEJs with irregular drift coefficients and contributing to new findings in the field.

1. Introduction and Notations

Backward Stochastic Differential Equations (BSDEs), both with and without jumps, have undergone extensive investigation due to their broad applications in mathematical finance, insurance reserving, optimal control theory, stochastic differential games, and dynamic risk measures [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]. Additionally, they establish significant connections with partial differential equations and play a crucial role in utility optimization and dynamic risk measure applications [8,9,10,11,12,13].
Efforts have been made to relax assumptions on the coefficients, allowing for the consideration of BSDEs with irregular generators. Notably, measurable generators involving the local time of the unknown process have been investigated in continuous cases in references such as [14,15,16,17], and in the context of jump processes in [18]. These prior studies encompass a specific class of BSDEs with quadratic growth, extensively explored using various approaches as seen in works like [19,20,21,22,23,24,25]. Further investigations for BSDEs with quadratic growth and jumps are found in [26,27,28,29,30]. Singular forms of BSDEs in the Brownian setting have also been explored in [31,32], and for stochastic differential equations (SDEs) with measurable drifts, readers can refer to [33].
This paper aims to extend the findings from previous works, including [14,15,16,17], into the setting of jump processes. Additionally, it builds upon results established in [18] when dealing with generators represented as signed measures on R with finite total variation. More precisely we analyze BSDEs driven by Wiener process and an independent Poisson random measure. The drift term contains a singular expression related to the local time of the unknown process, a signed measure that may charge singletons and a functional of the integral process with respect to the compensated Poisson random measure. This represent a generalization of the results established in the former references to the framework of jumps processes. The difficulties appeared on the jumps parts once the original BSDEJ is transformed my means of an Itô type formula. A particular focus will be on a new term generated after this transformation.
Furthermore, this study provides a fresh proof of the converse of Proposition 1 in [14] without introducing additional assumptions. In particular, we succeeded by deeper analysis to avoid some assumptions imposed in the former reference.
The key methodology involves establishing Tanaka-Krylov’s formula for a specific class of solutions of BSDEs with jumps, where irregular drifts are present. This is achieved through the utilization of the phase space transformation technique introduced by [34], eliminating the drift term containing the signed measure and the local time of the unknown process Y. It is noteworthy that this technique has also been applied to the numerical solutions of a class of stochastic differential equations in continuous settings, as detailed in [33]. Collectively, these studies enhance our understanding of BSDEs with irregular coefficients, establishing them as valuable tools in various mathematical and financial domains.
Consider a bounded time interval [ 0 , T ] , and let R * = R { 0 } be equipped with the Borel sigma-algebra B ( R * ) , where a positive measure σ is defined on R * with σ ( R * ) being finite. We work within a filtered probability space ( Ω , F , { F t } t [ 0 , T ] , P ) that supports two independent stochastic processes:
  • B = { B t } t [ 0 , T ] , a one-dimensional standard Brownian motion.
  • ( d r , d e ) , a Poisson random measure that is time-homogeneous with compensator σ ( d e ) d r on ( [ 0 , T ] × R * , B [ 0 , T ] B ( R * ) ) .
Let ˜ ( d r , d e ) = ( d r , d e ) σ ( d e ) d r represent the compensated jump measure. The filtration { F t } t [ 0 , T ] is generated by the processes W and ˜ , with the completion involving P -null sets and ensuring right continuity.
Now, define the following spaces:
  • L 2 ( Ω ) denotes the Banach space of real-valued random variables on the probability space ( Ω , F , P ) that are square integrable. S 2 : The set of càdlàg processes Y that are F t -adapted for which E [ sup 0 t T | Y t | 2 ] < .
  • L σ p : The set of measurable functions u defined on R * such that the norm u ( · ) σ , p : = ( R * | u ( e ) | p σ ( d e ) ) 1 p is finite.
  • M W 2 : The space of processes Z that are F t -adapted and satisfying E [ 0 T Z r 2 d r ] < .
  • L W 2 : The space of processes Z on [ 0 , T ] that are F t -adapted and satisfying 0 T Z r 2 d r < P - a . s .
  • M N 2 : The space of F t -predictable processes U satisfying E [ 0 T U r ( · ) σ , 2 2 d r ] < .
  • L N 2 : The space of F t -predictable processes U on [ 0 , T ] × R * satisfying 0 T U r ( · ) σ , 2 2 d r < . P - a . s .
  • Also, denote by BV ( R ) the space of functions f : R R with bounded variation on R , satisfying the following conditions:
    • f is right-continuous.
    • There exists ε > 0 such that f ( x ) ε for all x R .
    Given a function f in BV ( R ) , f ( x ) denotes the left-limit of f at a point x, and f ( d x ) is the bounded measure associated with f (i.e., | f | ( R ) < + ).
  • For a continuous function g, let g and g + be the left-hand and right-hand derivatives of g when they exist, and s g ( x ) = g ( x ) + g + ( x ) 2 be the associated symmetric derivative of g.
  • M ( R ) denotes the space of all signed measures κ on R such that the total variation | κ | ( R ) ( | κ | = κ + + κ ) of κ is finite ( | κ | ( R ) < + ), and | κ ( { x } ) | < 1 for all x in R . If κ is in M ( R ) , κ c denotes the continuous part of κ , and κ + and κ are respectively the positive and negative parts of κ .
  • BV 1 2 R is the space of continuous functions g : R R for which the symmetric derivative s g of g belongs to BV ( R ) , and the signed measure g ( d x ) associated with s g satisfies | g | ( R ) < + .
  • BV 2 , l o c 2 R is the space of continuous functions g defined on R such that both g and its generalized derivatives s g are locally integrable on R , and g ( d x ) , the signed measure, is locally bounded. Clearly, BV 2 , l o c 2 R BV 1 , l o c 2 R .

1.1. Brief Overview of Local Time

In this subsection, we will use specific notation. The function sign denoted sgn is defined as follows:
sgn ( x ) = 1 if x ] 0 , + [ 1 if x ] , 0 ] .
It is crucial to observe that our definition of sgn is asymmetric. Throughout the discussion, sgn ( x ) represents the left derivative of | x | , and sgn ( x a ) signifies the left derivative of | x a | . Due to the convexity of | x a | , Tanaka’s formula implies, for a semi-martingale Y:
Y t a = Y 0 a + 0 + t sgn Y r a d Y r + A t a ,
here, ( A t a ) t 0 represents the increasing process associated with the semi-martingale | Y a | .
Definition 1. 
The local time at a for Y, denoted as L t a ( Y ) , is defined by:
L t a ( Y ) = A t a 0 < r < t { | Y r a | | Y r a | sgn ( Y r a ) Δ Y r } .
Protter [35] demonstrated that the stochastic integral
0 + t sgn ( Y r a ) d Y r
in (1) possesses a version that is jointly measurable in ( ω , t , a ) and càdlàg in t. Consequently, the process ( A t a ) t 0 also has this property, and consequently, the local time L t a ( Y ) does too. We consistently adopt this jointly measurable, càdlàg version of the local time without specific mention.
Moreover, it is worth noting that the jumps of the process A · a defined in (1) precisely correspond to:
0 < r < t | Y r a | | Y r a | sgn ( Y r a ) Δ Y r ,
hence, the local time ( L t a ( Y ) ) t 0 exhibits continuity with respect to t. Specifically, the local time L · a ( Y ) corresponds to the continuous part of the increasing process A · a . A well-established result asserts the existence of a version of { L t a ( Y ) : t 0 , a R } that is continuous in t , with both right and left limits in a. This version is given by:
lim x a + , s t L s x ( Y ) = L t a + ( Y ) = L t a ( Y ) and lim x a , s t L s x ( Y ) = L t a ( Y ) exists .
The following proposition, with a proof available in Protter [35], is both straightforward and essential for establishing the properties of L t a ( Y ) that in fact validate its nomenclature. For any real number x, we reintroduce the standard notations x + = x 0 = max ( x , 0 ) and x = ( x 0 ) = min ( x , 0 ) , hence | x | = x + x + .
Proposition 1. 
Let Y be a semi-martingale and let L a be its local time at the level a. Then
Y t a + Y 0 a + = 0 + t 1 1 Y r > a d Y r + 0 < s t 1 1 Y r > a Y r a + 0 < r t 1 1 Y r a Y r a + + 1 2 L t a ( Y ) Y t a Y 0 a = 0 + t 1 1 Y r a d Y r + 0 < s t 1 1 Y r > a Y r a + 0 < r t 1 1 Y r a Y r a + + 1 2 L t a ( Y ) .
Furthermore, for almost every ω, the measure in t, d L t a ( Y ( ω ) ) , is supported by the set
{ r : Y r ( ω ) = a } = { r : Y r ( ω ) = a } .
For details we refer to [35], Theorem 68. and its proof p. 213.
Let Y be càdlàg semi-martingale, let L ˜ t a ( Y ) denotes the local time of Y at the level a, defined by Tanaka’s formula as follows:
L ˜ t a ( Y ) = | Y t a | | Y 0 a | 0 t sgn ˜ ( Y r a ) d Y r
and
sgn ˜ ( x ) = 1 for   x ] 0 , [ 0 for   x = 0 1 for   x ] , 0 [ .
One can write alternatively:
L ˜ t a ( Y ) = L t a ( Y ) + L t a ( Y ) 2 .

1.2. Problem Formulation

We consider the following BSDEJs that will be referred along the paper as Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ )
Y t = ζ + t T Θ ( Y r , Z r , U r ( · ) ) d r + R L ˜ T a ( Y ) L ˜ t a ( Y ) κ ( d a ) t T Z r d B r t T R * U r ( e ) N ˜ ( d r , d e ) ,
where for any given level parameter a, L ˜ t a ( Y ) represents the symmetric local time at time t for the unknown semi-martingale ( Y t ) t 0 .
We aim to solve the equation Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) under the following conditions:
A1:
The random variable ζ is R -valued and belongs to L 2 ( Ω , F T , P ) .
A2:
The function Θ : R × R × L σ 2 R satisfies:
(i)
The map ( y , z , u ( · ) ) Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) is continuous.
(ii)
There exists a constant K > 0 such that for any ( y , z ) R × R :
| Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) | K ( 1 + | y | + | z | + u ( · ) σ , 1 ) .
A3:
the measure κ belongs to M ( R ) .
Given κ in M ( R ) , we denote κ c as the continuous part of the measure κ . We also define:
f κ ( x ) = exp 2 κ c ( ( , x ] ) y x 1 + κ ( { y } ) 1 κ ( { y } ) .
For any x R , we denote:
F κ ( x ) = 0 x f κ ( y ) d y and g κ ( x ) = f κ ( F κ 1 ( x ) ) + f κ ( F κ 1 ( x ) ) 2 .
Let s F κ denote the symmetric derivative of F κ , expressed as:
s F κ ( x ) = f κ ( x ) + f κ ( x ) 2 = g κ ( F κ ( x ) ) .
Our focus is on investigating the well-posedness of the R -valued BSDEJs Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) for the given generators Θ outlined below.
  • Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = u ( · ) F κ , σ ( y ) = R * F κ ( y + u ( e ) ) F κ ( y ) s F κ ( y ) u ( e ) s F κ ( y ) σ ( d e ) = : Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) ) ,
  • Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = c z R * u ( e ) σ ( d e )
  • Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = c z + Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) )
  • Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = θ ( y , u ( · ) ) + c z + Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) )
  • Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = θ ( y , u ( · ) ) + c z
  • Θ ( x , y , z , u ( · ) ) = f 0 ( · , x ) + c z + Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) )
Explicit conditions for h and f 0 will be detailed in the relevant section.
It is worth noting that the equation Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) encompasses BSDEJ instances with quadratic growth, particularly when the measure κ is absolutely continuous concerning the Lebesgue measure on R . This observation becomes apparent through the utilization of the occupation density formula.

1.3. Technical Results

Definition 2. 
Consider an F T -measurable and square integrable random variable ζ. A triple of processes ( Y , Z , U ( · ) ) , where Y is adapted, and Z and U ( · ) are predictable, is deemed a solution to Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) if it satisfies Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) P -almost surely, provided that Z M W 2 , U ( · ) M N 2 , Y S 2 .
The following lemma, pivotal in the proof of Proposition 3 and Theorem 2, is particularly useful. The transformation F κ eliminates the generator Θ κ , σ and the part involving the local time in the Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) .
Lemma 1. 
Let f be a function of bounded variation, where f ( x ) denotes the left limit of f at a point x, and f ( d x ) represents the bounded measure associated with f. If κ belongs to M ( R ) , then there exists a function f in BV ( R ) , uniquely determined up to a multiplicative constant, such that:
f ( d x ) ( f ( x ) + f ( x ) ) κ ( d x ) = 0 ,
if we specify that lim x f ( x ) = 1 , then f is unique and given by
f κ ( x ) = exp 2 κ c ( ( , x ] ) y x 1 + κ ( { y } ) 1 κ ( { y } ) .
A more concise form of the lemma below, suitable when the measure κ is absolutely continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure, can be found in [33] for SDEs and [18] for BSDEs in the Brownian motion framework.
Lemma 2. 
The function f κ defined in (2) is increasing, right-continuous, and satisfies:
0 < m κ 1 f κ ( x ) m κ f o r a l l x R
for some constant m κ . Moreover, f κ satisfies:
f κ ( d x ) f κ ( x ) + f κ ( x ) κ ( d x ) = 0 , or equivalently F κ ( d x ) 2 s F κ ( x ) κ ( d x ) = 0 .
The function F κ , as defined in (3), possesses the following properties:
(i)
Both F κ and F κ 1 are quasi-isometries: that is for any x , y R :
m κ 1 x y | F κ ( x ) F κ ( y ) | m κ x y , m κ 1 x y | F κ 1 ( x ) F κ 1 ( y ) | m κ x y .
(ii)
The function F κ is injective. Moreover, both F κ and its inverse, F κ 1 , are members of BV 1 2 R .
Proof of (i).
By definition, the functions F κ and its inverse F κ 1 are continuous, injective, strictly increasing functions. Moreover, f κ satisfies ordinary differential Equation (6). Additionally, s ( F κ 1 ) is the symmetric derivative of F κ 1 , so for every x R :
m κ 1 s F κ ( x ) m κ and m κ 1 s ( F κ 1 ) ( x ) m κ .
Proof of (ii).
It can be easily verified that F κ 1 belongs to the class BV 1 2 R . □
Lemma 3. 
Let u ( · ) be a measurable function in L σ 1 . For a given real number x
(i)
The operator
[ u ] F κ , σ ( x ) : = R * F κ ( x + u ( e ) ) F κ ( x ) s F κ ( x ) u ( e ) s F κ ( x ) σ ( d e )
is well-defined. Moreover,
| [ u ] F κ , σ ( x ) | ( 1 + m κ 2 ) u ( · ) σ , 1 .
(ii)
If κ is a non-negative measure, then [ u ] F κ , σ ( x ) 0 for all x R .
Proof of (i).
By virtue of the quasi-isometry properties of the function F κ as defined in (3), for all x R , we obtain:
[ u ] F κ , σ ( x ) R * F κ ( x + u ( e ) ) F κ ( x ) s F κ ( x ) u ( e ) σ ( d e ) R * F κ ( x + u ( e ) ) F κ ( x ) s F κ ( x ) σ ( d e ) + u ( · ) σ , 1 ( m κ 2 + 1 ) u ( · ) σ , 1 ,
consequently,
[ u ] F κ , σ ( x ) 1 + m κ 2 u ( · ) σ , 1 ,
which means that the operator [ u ] F κ , σ ( · ) is well-defined. □
Proof of (ii).
Also, note that for every x R , we can express s F κ ( x ) [ u ] F κ , σ ( x ) as:
s F κ ( x ) [ u ] F κ , σ ( x ) = R * F κ ( x + u ( e ) ) F κ ( x ) s F κ ( x ) u ( e ) σ ( d e ) = R * x x + u ( e ) 1 1 { u ( e ) > 0 } s F κ ( y ) s F κ ( x ) d y σ ( d e ) + R * x + u ( e ) x 1 1 { u ( e ) < 0 } s F κ ( x ) s F κ ( y ) d y σ ( d e ) .
The last two terms in the inequality above are non-negative, given that s F κ is positive and increasing whenever κ is a non-negative measure. □
Corollary 1. 
For a given real number x and a predictable process U ˜ ( · ) on [ 0 , T ] × R * , such that:
0 T R * | U ˜ r ( e ) | σ ( d e ) d r < + P - a . s .
Then, from (10), we have:
0 T | [ U ˜ r ] F κ , σ ( x ) | d r 1 + m κ 2 0 T U ˜ r ( · ) σ , 1 d r P - a . s .
Moreover, if U ˜ ( · ) in M N 2 , then there exists a constant C κ , σ (depending only on κ and σ) such that:
0 T E | [ U ˜ r ( · ) ] F κ , σ ( x ) | 2 d r C κ , σ 0 T E [ U ˜ r ( · ) σ , 2 2 ] d r .

1.4. Krylov’s Estimates and Tanaka-Krylov’s Formula for BSDEJs

If ( X t ) t 0 is a real-valued semi-martingale such that 0 r t | Δ X r | is almost surely finite for each t > 0 , and g represents the difference between two convex functions, according to [35] Tanaka’s formula affirms that for every x R , there exists an adapted process ( L ˜ t x ( X · ) ) t 0 such that, for each t 0 , it holds with probability 1:
g ( X t ) = g ( X 0 ) + 0 t g ( X r ) d X r + 1 2 R L ˜ t x ( X · ) g ( d x ) + 0 r t u ( X r ) u ( X r ) g ( X r ) Δ X r ,
where g represents the left first derivative of g, and g is a signed measure, serving as the second derivative of g in the generalized function sense. Additionally,
0 t ϕ ( X r ) d X · r c = L ˜ t x ( X · ) ϕ ( x ) d x
for any measurable function ϕ .
Proposition 2 (Krylov’s type estimates).
Let ( Y , Z , U ( · ) ) be a solution to Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) in the sense of Definition 2 where Θ satisfies ( A 2 ) . Put
η = 2 sup 0 t T | Y t | + 2 0 T U r ( · ) σ , 1 d r + 2 0 T Θ ( Y r , Z r , U r ( · ) ) d r ,
then, for any measure κ in M ( R ) , we have
E R L ˜ T a ( Y ) | κ | ( d a ) 2 C e 2 | κ | ( R ) E η
Proof. 
For a fixed real number x, we define, for simplification of expressions, φ x ( y ) = ( y x ) . Tanaka’s formula implies:
φ x ( Y t ) = φ x ( Y 0 ) + 0 t 1 1 { Y r < x } d Y r + 1 2 L ˜ t x ( Y ) + 0 t R * φ x ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) φ x ( Y r ) 1 1 { Y r < x } U r ( e ) σ ( d e ) d r = φ x ( Y 0 ) + M t 0 t 1 1 { Y r < x } d r R L ˜ r a ( Y ) κ ( d a ) + 1 2 L ˜ t x ( Y ) 0 t 1 1 { Y r < x } Θ ( Y r , Z r , U r ( · ) ) d r + 0 t R * φ x ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) φ x ( Y r ) 1 1 { Y r < x } U r ( e ) σ ( d e ) d r
where
M t = 0 t 1 1 { Y r < x } Z r d B r + 0 t R * 1 1 { Y r x } U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e )
is a martingale.
Observe also that thanks to the property of the local time
0 t 1 1 { Y r < x } d r R L ˜ r a ( Y ) κ ( d a ) = x L ˜ t a ( Y ) κ ( d a ) .
Utilizing the one-Lipschitz property of the mapping y φ x ( y ) = ( y x ) , we deduce that:
1 2 L ˜ t x ( Y ) | Y t Y 0 | + x L ˜ t a ( Y ) | κ | ( d a ) M t + 0 T Θ ( Y r , Z r , U r ( · ) ) d r + 2 0 T U r ( · ) σ , 1 d r ,
hence
0 L ˜ t x ( Y ) 2 η 2 M t + 2 x L ˜ t a ( Y ) | κ | ( d a ) .
By computing the expectation in both sides of (13), we derive
E L ˜ t x ( Y ) 2 E [ η ] + 2 x E L ˜ t a ( Y ) | κ | ( d a ) .
Applying Gronwall’s Lemma to the function E [ L ˜ t x ( Y ) ] yields:
sup x E L ˜ t x ( Y ) 2 E [ η ] e 2 | κ | ( R ) .
Now, let κ be in M ( R ) , then
R E [ L ˜ t a ( Y ) ] | κ | ( d a ) sup x E L ˜ t x ( Y ) | κ | ( d a ) 2 | κ | ( R ) e 2 | κ | ( R ) E [ η ] .
Proposition 2 is proved since E [ η ] is finite thanks to the linear growth of Θ and Definition 2. □
In what follows, we will establish a change of variable formula in the spirit of Tanaka-Krylov for solutions to one-dimensional BSDEs with jumps, incorporating the local time of the unknown process.
Theorem 1 (Tanaka-Krylov’s formula).
Assume that Θ satisfies ( A 2 ) . Let ( Y , Z , U ( · ) ) be a solution to Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) . Then, for any function g in the space BV 1 , l o c 2 ( R ) , the following holds:
g ( Y t ) = g ( Y 0 ) + 0 t s g ( Y r ) d Y r + 1 2 R L ˜ t a ( Y ) g ( d a ) + 0 < r t g ( Y r ) g ( Y ˜ r ) s g ( Y r ) Δ Y r ,
which can be written as
g ( Y t ) = g ( Y 0 ) + 0 t s g ( Y r ) d Y r + 1 2 R L ˜ t a ( Y ) g ( d a ) + 0 t R * g Y r + U r ( e ) g Y r s g ( Y r ) U r ( e ) ( d r , d e ) .
Proof. 
For R > | Y 0 | , let τ R : = inf { t > 0 : max ( | Y t | , sup e R * Y t + U t ( e ) ) R } . Given that τ R tends to infinity as R approaches infinity, we can establish the formula (15) by substituting t with t τ R . The stochastic integral 0 t τ R s g ( Y r ) d Y r is well-defined since s g is of bounded variation, and ( Y r ) 0 r T is a càdlàg semi-martingale. Additionally, the jump term
0 t τ R R * g Y r + U r ( e ) g ( Y r ) s g ( Y r ) U r ( e ) ( d e , d r )
is also well defined since
0 t τ R R * g Y r + U r ( e ) g ( Y r ) g ( Y r ) U r ( e ) σ ( d e ) d r M R + max x [ R , R ] s g ( x ) 0 t τ R U r ( · ) σ , 1 d r .
Leveraging the local Lipschitz continuity of g and g , along with Proposition 2, the expression R L ˜ t τ R a ( Y ) g ( d a ) is properly defined, given that
E | R L ˜ t τ R a ( Y ) g ( d a ) | sup x E L ˜ t τ R x ( Y ) | g | ( R ) .
Next we consider a sequence of C 2 -class functions, denoted as g n , obtained through classical regularization by convolution, satisfying the conditions:
(i)
the sequence g n converges uniformly to g in the interval [ R , R ] .
(ii)
the sequence g n = s g n converges uniformly to s g in the interval [ R , R ] .
(iii)
g n ( d a ) converges weakly in L 1 ( [ R , R ] ) to g ( d a ) .
Classical Itô’s formula applied to g n ( Y t τ R ) yields:
g n ( Y t τ R ) = g n ( Y 0 ) + 0 t τ R g n ( Y r ) d Y r + 1 2 0 t τ R g n ( Y r ) | Z r | 2 d r + 0 t τ R R * g n Y r + U r ( e ) g n ( Y r ) g n ( Y r ) U r ( e ) ( d r , d e ) .
Passing to the limit as n tends towards infinity in (16) together with above properties (i), (ii), (iii) and Proposition 2, yield
g ( Y t τ R ) = g ( Y 0 ) + 0 t τ R s g ( Y r ) d Y r + 1 2 R L ˜ t τ R a ( Y ) g ( d a ) + 0 t τ R R * g Y r + U r ( e ) g ( Y r ) s g ( Y r ) U r ( e ) ( d r , d e ) .
This completes the proof of Theorem 1. □
Moving forward, a variate of Tanaka-Krylov’s formula will be frequently employed in the subsequent sections.
Considering a generator Θ subject to appropriate conditions ensuring the existence of a solution for BSDEJs, the following types of Tanaka-Krylov’s formula will be prevalent in the subsequent discussions.
  • Let ( Y , Z , U ( · ) ) be a solution to Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) . Applying Tanaka-Krylov’s formula (15) to F κ ( Y t ) results in
F κ ( Y t ) = F κ ( ζ ) + t T s F κ ( Y r ) d Y r + 1 2 R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) F κ ( d x ) t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r t T R * s F κ ( Y r ) U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) t < r T F κ ( Y r ) F κ ( Y r ) s F κ ( Y r ) Δ Y r .
Due to the characteristic that L ˜ T x ( Y ) only increases on the set { Y r = x } , the term t T s F κ ( Y r ) d Y r can be expressed as:
t T s F κ ( Y r ) Θ ( Y r , Z r , U r ( · ) ) d r t T s F κ ( Y r ) d r R L ˜ r x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) = t T s F κ ( Y r ) Θ ( Y r , Z r , U r ( · ) ) d r R s F κ ( a ) L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) .
Furthermore,
t < r T F κ ( Y r ) F κ ( Y r ) s F κ ( Y r ) Δ Y r = t T R * F κ ( Y r ) F κ ( Y r ) s F κ ( Y r ) U r ( e ) ( d r , d e ) .
Taking also into account that
s F κ ( y ) [ u ] F κ , σ ( y ) = R * F κ y + u ( e ) F κ ( y ) s F κ ( y ) u ( e ) σ ( d e ) .
and
1 2 F κ ( d x ) s F κ ( x ) κ ( d x ) = 0 ,
the Equation (17) reads
F κ ( Y t ) = F κ ( ζ ) t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r + t T s F κ ( Y r ) Θ ( Y r , Z r , U r ( · ) ) U r F κ , σ ( Y r ) d r t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
In particular, if Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) ) = [ u ] F κ , σ ( y ) , we get
F κ ( Y t ) = F κ ( ζ ) t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
For each 0 r T , we define new processes
Y ˜ r = F κ ( Y r ) , Z ˜ r = s F κ ( Y r ) Z r
and
U ˜ r ( e ) = F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) .
These notations will be employed consistently throughout the rest of this paper.

1.5. A Priori Estimates

Proposition 3. 
Let ζ L 2 ( Ω ) and κ M ( R ) . If ( Y , Z , U ) satisfies the Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) , then we have:
(i)
( Z ˜ r ) 0 r T , ( Z r ) 0 r T M W 2 and ( U ˜ r ( e ) ) 0 r T , e R * ,
( U r ( e ) ) 0 r T , e R * M N 2 ,
(ii)
( Y ˜ r ) 0 r T , ( Y r ) 0 r T S 2 ,
(iii)
E [ | R L ˜ T a ( Y ) κ ( d a ) | ] 2 is finite.
Proof of (i).
Let us first recall an important equality that will be used repeatedly in the proofs. For a given stochastic process ψ · ( · ) in M N 2 we have
E 0 T R * ψ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) 2 = E 0 T R * | ψ r ( e ) | 2 ( d r , d e ) = E 0 T R * E [ | ψ r ( e ) | 2 ] σ ( d e ) d r ,
then from Tanaka-Krylov’s formula (19) we have
F κ ( Y t ) = F κ ( ζ ) t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) ,
since F κ satisfies (6). For t = 0 we get
F κ ( Y 0 ) F κ ( ζ ) = 0 T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r + 0 T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
Taking the square of the L 2 ( Ω ) norm in (21), thanks to the orthogonality of the martingales B · and 0 · R * ˜ ( d r , d e ) together with the inequalities (7) and (8), we get
m κ 2 0 T E Z r 2 d r + 0 T E U r ( · ) σ , 2 2 d r E 0 T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r 2 + E 0 T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) 2 σ ( d e ) d r = E 0 T Z ˜ r d B r 2 + E 0 T R * U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) 2 F κ 2 ( Y 0 ) + E F κ 2 ( ζ ) F κ 2 ( Y 0 ) + m κ 2 E ζ 2 < ,
consequently Z ˜ , Z M W 2 and U ˜ · , U · M N 2 . □
Proof of (ii).
Again thanks to the Tanaka-Krylov’s formula (19), we get
F κ ( Y t ) = F κ ( ζ ) t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
Thanks to (7) and F κ 0 = 0 one has the following estimates:
m κ 1 Y t F κ ( Y t ) F κ ( ζ ) + t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r + t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) F κ ( ζ ) + sup 0 t T 0 t Z ˜ r d B r + sup 0 t T 0 t R * U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) ,
applying convex inequalities and taking the supremum over the interval [ 0 , T ] yield:
m κ 2 sup 0 t T Y t 2 sup 0 t T Y ˜ t 2 2 2 ( m κ 2 ζ 2 + sup 0 t T | 0 t Z ˜ r d B r | 2 + sup 0 t T | 0 t R * U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) | 2 ) .
Then by calculating the expectation and applying Burkholder-Davis-Gundy inequality, we obtain
m κ 2 E sup 0 t T Y t 2 E sup 0 t T Y ˜ t 2 4 m κ 2 E | ζ | 2 + 0 T E | Z ˜ r | 2 d r + 0 T E U ˜ r ( · ) σ , 2 2 d r .
We deduce that the right-hand side of the above inequality is finite due to the statement (i). □
Proof of (iii).
Since ( Y , Z , U · ( · ) ) satisfies Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) , thus
R L ˜ T a ( Y ) κ ( d a ) = 0 T Z r d B r + 0 T R * U r ( e ) N ˜ ( d r , d e ) + Y 0 ζ 0 T U r F κ , σ ( Y ˜ r ) d r .
Again, making use of the convex inequality and taking the expectation in the above inequality we get
E R L ˜ T a ( Y ) κ ( d a ) 2 2 4 E 0 T Z r d B r 2 + E 0 T R * U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) 2 + 2 4 Y 0 2 + E ζ 2 + T 0 T E U r F κ , σ ( Y ˜ r ) 2 d r 2 4 E 0 T Z r 2 d r + E 0 T U r ( · ) σ , 2 2 d r + 2 4 Y 0 2 + E ζ 2 + T C κ , σ E 0 T U r ( · ) σ , 2 2 d r
thus the square integrability of R L ˜ T a ( Y ) κ ( d a ) is ensured because all terms on the right-hand side of the above inequality are finite, as guaranteed by condition (i). □

2. Main Results

The objective of this section is to investigate the existence and uniqueness of solutions to the BSDE with jumps, denoted as Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) .
It is important to note that the findings in this section serve as natural extensions to the results obtained in previous works, namely [14,15,16,17,18] by allowing the BSDE to be also driven by a compensated Poisson random measure as well as the possibility to include irregular generators. Specifically, the following theorem provides a comprehensive response to the converse of Proposition 1 point (2) in [14] without requiring any additional assumption on the discontinuity points of the function g κ . Notably, the assumption (5) on page 106 in [14] has been removed.
Moreover, this result represents a generalization of the outcomes established in [18] for a class of signed measures within the space M ( R ) . In other words, the results obtained in [18] correspond to the particular case where the measure κ is absolutely continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure.
Theorem 2. 
Under ( A 1 ) ( A 3 ) the triplet ( Y , Z , U ( · ) ) is a solution to Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) if and only if ( Y ˜ , Z ˜ , U ˜ ( · ) ) is a solution to Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , 0 , 0 ) .
Proof of Theorem 2.
  • Necessary condition: Let ( Y , Z , U ( · ) ) be a solution of equation Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) , then (19) shows that ( Y ˜ , Z ˜ , U ˜ ( · ) ) satisfies Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , 0 , 0 ) . Moreover, thanks to Proposition 3, ( Y ˜ , Z ˜ , U ˜ ( · ) ) is a solution to Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , 0 , 0 ) in the sense of the Definition 2.
  • Sufficient condition: Consider a solution triplet ( Y ˜ , Z ˜ , U ˜ ( · ) ) to Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , 0 , 0 ) . For simplicity, let us denote G κ = F κ 1 . Applying Tanaka-Krylov’s formula (15) to Y t = G κ ( Y ˜ t ) (given that G κ belongs to BV 1 2 ( R ) ), we observe that:
    G κ ( Y ˜ t ) = ζ t T s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) Z ˜ r d B r t T R * s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) R L ˜ T a ( Y ˜ ) L ˜ t a ( Y ˜ ) G κ ( d a ) t < r T G κ ( Y ˜ r ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) Δ Y ˜ r ,
    then
    Y t = ζ t T s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) Z ˜ r d B r t T R * s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) 1 2 R L ˜ T a ( Y ˜ ) L ˜ t a ( Y ˜ ) G κ ( d a ) t T R * G κ ( Y ˜ r + U ˜ r ( e ) ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) U ˜ r ( e ) ( d r , d e )
    or equivalently
    Y t = ζ t T s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) Z ˜ r d B r t T R * s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) 1 2 R L ˜ T a ( Y ˜ ) L ˜ t a ( Y ˜ ) G κ ( d a ) t T R * G κ ( Y ˜ r + U ˜ r ( e ) ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) U ˜ r ( e ) σ ( d e ) d r t T R * G κ ( Y ˜ r + U ˜ r ( e ) ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
Notice that the difficulty here is identification of the term
1 2 R L ˜ t a ( Y ˜ ) G κ ( d a )
with
R L ˜ t x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) .
The idea is to apply once again the transformation F κ to Y represented by the expression in (23). To this purpose we set C t = 1 2 R L ˜ t a ( Y ˜ ) G κ ( d a ) and notice that
s G κ ( x ) = 2 F κ ( G κ ( x ) ) + F κ ( G κ ( x ) ) = 1 g κ ( x ) .
therefore
R * G κ ( Y ˜ r + U ˜ r ( e ) ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) U ˜ r ( e ) g κ ( Y ˜ r ) σ ( d e ) = R * U r ( e ) F κ ( Y r ) F κ ( Y r ) g κ ( Y r ) σ ( d e ) = R * F κ ( Y r ) F κ ( Y r ) s F κ ( Y r ) U r ( e ) σ ( d e ) = U r F κ , σ ( Y r ) .
thus
Y t = ζ t T s G κ ( Y ˜ r ) Z ˜ r d B r t T R * G κ ( Y ˜ r + U ˜ r ( e ) ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) N ˜ ( d r , d e ) + C t C T + t T U r F κ , σ ( Y r ) d r .
Set Z r = Z ˜ r g κ ( Y ˜ r ) and U r ( e ) = G κ ( Y ˜ r + U ˜ r ( e ) ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) this implies
Y t = ζ t T Z r d B r t T R * U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) + C t C T + t T U r F κ , σ ( Y r ) d r .
Applying again the transformation F κ , we get thanks to (18)
Y ˜ t = F κ ( Y t ) = F κ ( ζ ) + 1 2 R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) F κ ( d x ) t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r t T s F κ ( Y r ) d C r = F κ ( ζ ) t T Z ˜ r d B r t T R * U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) + 1 2 R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) F κ ( d x ) t T s F κ ( Y r ) d C r .
Remember that ( Y ˜ , Z ˜ , U ˜ ( · ) ) is a solution to Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , 0 , 0 ) and thank to the equation 1 2 F κ ( d x ) = s F κ ( x ) κ ( d x ) , one gets
t T s F κ ( Y r ) d C r = 1 2 R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) F κ ( d x ) = R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) s F κ ( x ) κ ( d x ) = t T s F κ ( Y r ) R d r L ˜ r x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) ,
from which we deduce that
d C r = R d r L ˜ r x ( Y ) κ ( d x )
or equivalently
C t = R L ˜ t x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) = 1 2 R L ˜ t a ( Y ˜ ) G κ ( d a ) ,
finally substituting C t by this expression, the Equation (25) becomes
Y t = ζ + t T U r F κ , σ ( Y r ) d r + R ( L ˜ t x ( Y ) L ˜ T x ( Y ) ) κ ( d x ) t T Z r d B r t T R * U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
Similar to the proof of Proposition 3 and leveraging the properties (7) and (8), we readily demonstrate that:
| Y r | m κ | Y ˜ r | , | Z r | m κ | Z ˜ r | and | U r ( e ) | m κ | U ˜ r ( e ) | ,
consequently,
( Y r , Z r , U r ( e ) ) : = ( G κ ( Y ˜ r ) , s ( G κ ) ( Y ˜ r ) Z ˜ r , G κ ( Y ˜ r + U ˜ r ( e ) ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) ) ,
for 0 r T , e R * is a solution to Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) in the sense of Definition 2. □
Theorem 3. 
Under ( A 1 ) ( A 3 ) the Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) has a unique solution ( Y , Z , U ( · ) ) in the sense of Definition 2.
Proof of Theorem 3.
Given that F κ is globally Lipschitz, F κ ( ζ ) is in L 2 ( Ω ) if and only if ζ is in L 2 ( Ω ) . Consequently, by the martingale representation theorem, the equation Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , 0 , 0 ) has a triplet ( Y ˜ , Z ˜ , U ˜ ( · ) ) as its unique solution according to Definition 2, and the associated predictable processes ( Z ˜ ) and ( U ˜ ( · ) ) belong respectively to M W 2 and M N 2 . Now, with the aid of Theorem 2, the processes defined as follows:
Y r = G κ ( Y ˜ r ) , Z r = Z ˜ r s F κ ( G κ ( Y ˜ r ) )
and
U r ( e ) = G κ ( Y ˜ r + U ˜ r ( e ) ) G κ ( Y ˜ r ) .
imply that ( Y , Z , U ( · ) ) is the unique solution to the equation Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) . Applying the conditional expectation to both sides of Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , 0 , 0 ) results in:
Y ˜ t = E F κ ( ζ ) F t
and, consequently,
Y t = G κ E F κ ( ζ ) F t .
This completes the proof of the theorem. □

3. Other Examples of Irregular BSDEs with Jumps

In the upcoming section, we will leverage the findings from the preceding section to address specific instances of BSDEJs with irregular generators in the subsequent examples. We would like to point out that all the examples considered in our previous work [18] are particular case of the ones presented below and correspond to the case where the signed measure κ is absolutely continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure.
(A4):
ζ is square integrable
(A5):
κ M ( R ) .
Example 1. 
Eq ( ζ , c z R * u ( e ) σ ( d e ) , κ ) . Consider the following BSDEJ
Y t = ζ + t T c Z r R * U r ( e ) σ ( d e ) d r + R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) t T Z r d B r t T R * U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) ,
Taking Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = c z R * u ( e ) σ ( d e ) in (18), we get
F κ ( Y t ) = F κ ( ζ ) t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) σ d e d r + c t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d s t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) ,
or equivalently as
Y ˜ t = F κ ( ζ ) + t T c z R * U ˜ r e σ d e d r t T Z ˜ r d B r t T R * U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
Given that the generator of the aforementioned equation is linear in both z and u, and F κ ( ζ ) is square integrable, a unique solution exists. Consequently, Equation (26) possesses a unique solution.
Example 2. 
Eq ( ζ , c z + Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) ) , κ ) . This equation corresponds, for any constant c R , to the generator
Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) : = c z + Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) ) .
The application of the characterization derived in Theorem 2 reveals that: Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) is equivalent to Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , c z , 0 ) . The equation Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , c z , 0 ) has a unique solution if and only if F κ ( ζ ) is square integrable. This condition is satisfied under assumptions ( A 4 ) ( A 5 ) . Therefore, Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , c z , 0 ) has a unique solution, implying that our original Eq ( ζ , Θ ) also has a unique solution.
Now, we will introduce supplementary conditions to extend the coverage of generators beyond ( A 4 ) ( A 5 ) .
(A6):
Assume that the signed measure κ is absolutely continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure such that its Radon-Nikodym derivative is bounded and integrable over the whole space R .
(A7):
Let h : R × L σ 2 R be a measurable function satisfying for all u ( · ) , u ´ ( · ) in L σ 2 , z, z ´ and y, y ´ in R
θ ( y , u ( · ) ) θ ( y ´ , u ´ ( · ) ) L y y ´ + u ( · ) u ´ ( · ) σ , 2 .
and there exists a constant C > 0 such that θ ( y , u ( · ) ) C .
Example 3. 
Eq ( ζ , θ ( y , u ( · ) ) + c z + Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) ) , κ ) . This equation corresponds to the generator
Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) : = θ ( y , u ( · ) ) + c z + Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) ) , c R
shows that Eq ( ζ , Θ , κ ) is equivalent to Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , Θ 0 + c z , 0 ) where
Θ 0 ( y , u ( · ) ) : = s F κ ( G κ y ) h G κ ( y ) , G κ ( y + u ( · ) ) G κ ( y ) .
The equation Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , Θ 0 + c z , 0 ) possesses a unique solution if and only if Θ 0 is Lipschitz and F κ ( ζ ) is square integrable. This condition is satisfied under assumptions ( A 4 ) ( A 7 ) . Consequently, Eq ( F κ ( ζ ) , Θ 0 + c z , 0 ) has a unique solution, leading to the uniqueness of the solution for our original Eq ( ζ , Θ ) .
Example 4. 
Eq ( ζ , c z , κ ) . Consider the following BSDEJ
Y t = ζ + t T c Z r d r + R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) t T Z r d B r t T R * U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) ,
then by taking Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = c z in (18) we arrive at
Y ˜ t = F κ ( ζ ) + t T c Z ˜ r + R * Θ 1 ( Y ˜ r , U ˜ r ( e ) ) σ d e d r t T Z ˜ r d B r t T R * U ˜ r e ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
where
Θ 1 ( y , u ( e ) ) : = s F κ ( G κ ( y ) ) G κ ( y + u ( e ) ) G κ ( y ) u ( e ) = g κ ( y ) G κ ( y + u ( e ) ) G κ ( y ) u ( e ) .
Simple computations show that
Θ 1 ( y , u ( e ) ) Θ 1 ( y ´ , u ´ ( e ) ) L ( 1 + | u ( e ) | ) y y ´ + ( 1 + e 4 m κ ) u ( e ) u ´ ( e ) .
and
Θ 1 ( y , u ( e ) ) min ( 1 + e 4 m κ ) u ( e ) ; u ( e ) + 2 e 4 m κ u ( e ) + 2 y .
Consequently, the generator
Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = c z + R * Θ 1 ( y , u ( e ) ) σ d e .
is Lipschitz in both z and u ( · ) , continuous in y, and exhibits linear growth in all its arguments. This implies that the BSDEJ (29) may not necessarily have a unique solution (refer to [36]). As a result, the Equation (28) has a solution whenever F κ ( ζ ) is square integrable. Thus, (28) has at least one solution.
Example 5. 
Eq ( ζ , θ ( y , u ( · ) ) + c z , κ ) . Let h and κ satisfy ( A 6 ) ( A 7 ) of the Example 3 and consider the BSDEJ
Y t = ζ + t T h Y r , U r ( · ) + c Z r d r + R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) t T Z r d B r t T R * U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) .
Choosing the function Θ
Θ ( y , z , u ( · ) ) = θ ( y , u ( · ) ) + c z ,
in the Tanaka-Krylov’s formula (18) the new equation reads
F κ ( Y t ) = F κ ( ζ ) t T s F κ ( Y r ) Z r d B r t T R * F κ ( Y r + U r ( e ) ) F κ ( Y r ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) + t T s F κ ( Y r ) ( h Y r , U r ( · ) + c Z r R * F κ ( Y r ) F κ ( Y r ) s F κ ( Y r ) U r ( e ) σ ( d e ) ) d r .
which can be written as
Y ˜ t = F κ ( ζ ) + t T Θ 2 ( Y ˜ r , U ˜ r ( · ) ) + c Z ˜ r d r t T Z ˜ r d B r t T R * U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e )
where
Θ 2 ( y , u ( · ) ) : = Θ 0 ( y , u ( · ) ) + Θ 1 ( y , u ( · ) ) .
However, Θ 0 exhibits Lipschitz continuity property for under assumption ( A 6 ) on the measure κ, as demonstrated in Example 3. On the other hand, Θ 1 is only continuous in y, Lipschitz in u ( · ) , and has linear growth on y and u ( · ) . Consequently, the Equation (31) may not necessarily possess a unique solution (refer to, e.g., [36]). Ultimately, the Equation (30) does admit a solution.
Example 6. 
Consider the equation Eq ( ζ , f 0 ( r , x ) + c z + Θ κ , σ ( y , u ( · ) ) , κ ) , where κ is selected to ensure that the function g κ ( · ) is Lipschitz. Given an adapted stochastic process ( X s ) 0 s T and a measurable bounded function f 0 : [ 0 , T ] × R R such that 0 T E [ | f 0 ( r , X r ) | 2 ] d r is finite, the equation takes the form:
Y t = ζ + t T f 0 ( r , X r ) + c Z r + Θ κ , σ ( Y r , U r ( · ) ) d r + R L ˜ T x ( Y ) L ˜ t x ( Y ) κ ( d x ) t T Z r d B r t T R * U r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) ,
where the terminal value ζ is a square integrable random variable. Employing the same transformation as previously, Equation (32) can be reformulated as the following equivalent equation
Y ˜ t = F κ ( ζ ) + t T Θ ( r , Y ˜ r , Z ˜ r ) d r t T Z ˜ r d B r t T R * U ˜ r ( e ) ˜ ( d r , d e ) ,
having a Lipschitz coefficient that is stochastic in nature, taking the form of
Θ ( r , y , z ) = s F κ ( G κ y ) f 0 ( r , X r ) + c z = f κ ( G κ y ) + f κ ( G κ y ) 2 f 0 ( r , X r ) + c z = g κ ( y ) f 0 ( r , X r ) + c z
The Equation (33) has a unique solution since the generator Θ ( r , y , z ) is Lipschitz in y owing to the properties of the function g κ and is evidently linear in z.
Remark 1. 
  • We learned from the specific instances of singular BSDEJs mentioned above that the selection of Θ κ , σ as the drift for our main BSDEJs, Eq ( ζ , Θ κ , σ , κ ) , was crucial. This choice enables us to obtain a BSDEJ without drift.
  • If we replace c z with c | z | in all the preceding examples, the results remain valid.

4. Conclusions

In this article, we studied well-posedness of BSDEJs and irregular coefficients. The class of BSDEJs in concern contains in particular drifts with local time and a signed measure. It covers for instance BSDEJs with quadratic growth in the z-variable (the component of the Brownian motion) and measurable drifts term in the y -variable. To this end, we made use of mathematical analysis and probabilistic techniques to establish Krylov’s type estimates for functionals of solutions and Tanaka-Krylov’s formula for a specific class of BSDEJs with singular drifts. Additionally, we presented several examples leading to new findings in the framework of BSDEJs.
We extended then the findings from previous works such as [14,17] into the setting of jump processes. Additionally, this study builds upon the results established in [18] when dealing with generators represented as signed measures on R with finite total variation and also involving the local time of the unknown process.
More precisely, it is crucial to emphasize that the findings presented in this paper naturally extend the results from earlier works, specifically [14,15,16,17,18]. These extensions are notable as they allow the BSDEs to be driven not only by a compensated Poisson random measure but also accommodate irregular generators. This expansion is particularly significant as it addresses the converse of Proposition 1 point (2) in [14] without necessitating any additional assumptions on the discontinuity points of the function g κ . Importantly, the previously assumed condition (5) on page 106 in [14] has been eliminated.
Furthermore, this outcome serves as a broader generalization of the results established in [18] for a specific class of signed measures within the space M ( R ) . To clarify, the results obtained in [18] can be viewed as a special case where the measure κ is absolutely continuous with respect to the Lebesgue measure. In essence, the current results encompass a wider range of situations, offering a more comprehensive response beyond the specific conditions considered in prior research.
In particular several examples cover different situations in which the generators possess singularities in various forms.
In future research, these findings can be exploited as a mathematical tool to provide a probabilistic representation of solutions for a class of Partial Integral Differential Equations (PIDEs) incorporating quadratic terms in the gradient.
We plan also to apply approaches utilized in [33,37] for numerically solving BSDEJs with irregular (non-necessary continuous) generators.

Funding

The author extends his appreciation to the Deputyship for Research and Innovation, “Ministry of Education” in Saudi Arabia for funding this research through the project no. (IFKSUOR3-310-3).

Data Availability Statement

No new data were created or analyzed in this study. Data sharing is not applicable to this article.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares that he has no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

References

  1. Peng, S. A general stochastic maximum principle for optimal control problems. SIAM J. Control Optim. 1990, 28, 966–979. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Hamadène, S.; Lepeltier, J.P. Backward equations, stochastic control and zero-sum stochastic differential games. Stoch. Int. J. Probab. Stoch. Process. 1995, 54, 221–231. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  3. Hamadène, S.; Lepeltier, J.P. Zero-sum stochastic differential games and backward equations. Syst. Control Lett. 1995, 24, 259–263. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  4. El Karoui, N.; Peng, S.; Quenez, M.C. Backward stochastic differential equations in finance. Math. Financ. 1997, 7, 1–71. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  5. Hamadène, S. Backward-forward SDE’s and stochastic differential games. Stoch. Process. Their Appl. 1998, 77, 1–15. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Dos Reis, G. On Some Properties of Solutions of Quadratic Growth BSDE and Applications in Finance and Insurance. Ph.D. Thesis, Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany, 2010. [Google Scholar]
  7. Delong, Ł. Backward Stochastic Differential Equations with Jumps and Their Actuarial and Financial Applications; Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 2013. [Google Scholar]
  8. Peng, S. Probabilistic interpretation for systems of quasilinear parabolic partial differential equations. Stochastics Stochastics Rep. (Print) 1991, 37, 61–74. [Google Scholar]
  9. Barles, G.; Buckdahn, R.; Pardoux, E. Backward stochastic differential equations and integral-partial differential equations. Stochastics Int. J. Probab. Stoch. Process. 1997, 60, 57–83. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Pardoux, E.; Tang, S. Forward-backward stochastic differential equations and quasilinear parabolic PDEs. Probab. Theory Relat. Fields 1999, 114, 123–150. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  11. Becherer, D. Bounded solutions to backward SDE’s with jumps for utility optimization and indifference hedging. Ann. Appl. Probab. 2006, 16, 2027–2054. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  12. Morlais, M.A. Quadratic BSDEs driven by a continuous martingale and applications to the utility maximization problem. Financ. Stoch. 2009, 13, 121–150. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  13. Quenez, M.C.; Sulem, A. BSDEs with jumps, optimization and applications to dynamic risk measures. Stoch. Process. Their Appl. 2013, 123, 3328–3357. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  14. Dermoune, A.; Hamadène, S.; Ouknine, Y. Backward stochastic differential equation with local time. Stoch. Stoch. Rep. 1999, 66, 103–119. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  15. Eddahbi, M.; Ouknine, Y. Limit theorems for BSDE with local time applications to non-linear PDE. Stoch. Stoch. Rep. 2002, 73, 159–179. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  16. Bahlali, K.; Eddahbi, M.; Ouknine, Y. Solvability of some quadratic BSDEs without exponential moments. C. R. Math. 2013, 351, 229–233. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  17. Bahlali, K.; Eddahbi, M.; Ouknine, Y. Quadratic BSDE with L2-terminal data: Krylov’s estimate, Itô-Krylov’s formula and existence results. Ann. Probab. 2017, 45, 2377–2397. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  18. Madoui, I.; Eddahbi, M.; Khelfallah, N. Quadratic BSDEs with jumps and related PIDEs. Stoch. Int. J. Probab. Stoch. Process. 2022, 94, 386–414. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  19. Kobylanski, M. Backward stochastic differential equations and partial differential equations with quadratic growth. Ann. Probab. 2000, 28, 558–602. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Briand, P.; Hu, Y. BSDE with quadratic growth and unbounded terminal value. Probab. Theory Relat. Fields 2006, 136, 604–618. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Ankirchner, S.; Imkeller, P.; Dos Reis, G. Classical and varitional differentiability of BSDEs with quadratic growth. Electron. J. Probab. 2007, 12, 1418–1453. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  22. Briand, P.; Hu, Y. Quadratic BSDEs with convex generators and unbounded terminal conditions. Probab. Theory Relat. Fields 2008, 141, 543–567. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  23. Tevzadze, R. Solvability of backward stochastic differential equations with quadratic growth. Stoch. Process. Their Appl. 2008, 118, 503–515. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  24. Delbaen, F.; Hu, Y.; Richou, A. On the uniqueness of solutions to quadratic BSDEs with convex generators and unbounded terminal conditions. Ann. L’inst. Henri Poincare (B) Probab. Stat. 2011, 47, 559–574. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  25. Essaky, E.H.; Hassani, M. Generalized BSDE with 2-reflecting barriers and stochastic quadratic growth. J. Differ. Equ. 2013, 254, 1500–1528. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. Morlais, M.A. A new existence result for quadratic BSDEs with jumps with application to the utility maximization problem. Stoch. Process. Their Appl. 2010, 120, 1966–1995. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  27. Jeanblanc, M.; Mastrolia, T.; Possamaï, D.; Réveillac, A. Utility maximization with random horizon: A BSDE approach. Int. J. Theor. Appl. Financ. 2015, 18, 1550045. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  28. Kazi-Tani, N.; Possamaï, D.; Zhou, C. Quadratic BSDEs with jumps: A fixed-point approach. Electron. J. Probab. 2015, 20, 1–28. [Google Scholar]
  29. Kazi-Tani, N.; Possamaï, D.; Zhou, C. Quadratic BSDEs with jumps: Related nonlinear expectations. Stoch. Dyn. 2016, 16, 1650012. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Antonelli, F.; Mancini, C. Solutions of BSDE’s with jumps and quadratic/locally Lipschitz generator. Stoch. Process. Their Appl. 2016, 126, 3124–3144. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  31. Bahlali, K.; Kebiri, O.; Khelfallah, N.; Moussaoui, H. One dimensional BSDEs with logarithmic growth application to PDEs. Stoch. Int. J. Probab. Stoch. Process. 2017, 89, 1061–1081. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Bahlali, K. A domination method for solving unbounded quadratic BSDEs. Grad. J. Math. 2020, 5, 20–36. [Google Scholar]
  33. Eddahbi, M.; Mchiri, L.; Rhaima, M. Numerical solution of quadratic SDE with measurable drift. Filomat 2022, 36, 5263–5278. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  34. Zvonkin, A.K. A transformation of the phase space of a diffusion process that removes the drift. Math. USSR-Sb. 1974, 22, 129–149. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  35. Protter, P.E. Stochastic Integration and Differential Equations, 2nd ed.; Springer: Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany, 2004. [Google Scholar]
  36. Qin, Y.; Xia, N.M. BSDE driven by Poisson point processes with discontinuous coefficient. J. Math. Anal. Appl. 2013, 406, 365–372. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  37. Siddiqui, M.; Eddahbi, M.; Kebiri, O. Numerical Solutions of Stochastic Differential Equations with Jumps and Measurable Drifts. Mathematics 2023, 11, 3755. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Eddahbi, M. Well-Posedness of Backward Stochastic Differential Equations with Jumps and Irregular Coefficients. Fractal Fract. 2024, 8, 26. https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract8010026

AMA Style

Eddahbi M. Well-Posedness of Backward Stochastic Differential Equations with Jumps and Irregular Coefficients. Fractal and Fractional. 2024; 8(1):26. https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract8010026

Chicago/Turabian Style

Eddahbi, Mhamed. 2024. "Well-Posedness of Backward Stochastic Differential Equations with Jumps and Irregular Coefficients" Fractal and Fractional 8, no. 1: 26. https://doi.org/10.3390/fractalfract8010026

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop