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Published byBenedict Norman Modified over 9 years ago
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Are Options Mispriced? Greg Orosi
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Outline Option Calibration: two methods Consistency Problem Two Empirical Observations Results
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Option Calibration Calibrating a model: estimating the parameters of a given theoretical model There are two distinct approaches: cross-sectional based and time-series based Cross-sectional: minimize deviation between observed market prices and theoretical prices Time-series: determine parameters from historical asset price
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The solution can also be written as: where Under Risk Neutral Pricing: Example: volatility parameter in Black Scholes: Time Series Black-Scholes
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Cross Sectional: Black Scholes Example: Calibrating the (volatility of the) Black-Scholes model Let C T1,K1,..., C TN,KN be market prices of European calls on a stock with maturities and strikes of (T i, K i ) Let C(0,s;K,T, ) be the Black-Scholes price of a European call with strike K, maturity T if the volatility equals Determine that value solving:
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Crude Oil
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Advantages and Disadvantages Cross-sectional is forward looking – contains more information than time series Time-series is not forward looking but less likely to misprice options
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Implied Parameters Consider more complex model than B-S We can find “implied parameters” for other models by cross-sectional calibration, and parameters from time-series Compare the two sets of parameters
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` Heston model
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Implied and Actual Volatility Monthly Jan 1992-Jan 2004
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Skewness and Kurtosis
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Skewness – asymmetry
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Kurtosis
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Consistency Problem Parameters obtained from cross-sectional calibration and time-series calibration are different –Cross sectional values imply higher skewness –Also imply higher kurtosis It seems option markets imply significantly different dynamics for asset than historical parameters: consistency problem –Which is right? Are options mispriced? If options are mispriced there should be profitable trading strategies
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Can options be mispriced? Yes! Before 1987 crash plot of implied volatilities used to be flat! => Profit by buying OTM puts
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Option Markets Since 1987 crash, σ tends to be low strike price, known as “options smirk” So option markets “learned” and incorporated a higher likelihood of a sudden large movement than a model based on GBM
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Empirical Observation 1 Cause of skewness: puts are more expensive than calls, because they can serve as insurance against a crash
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Shorting Puts Maybe there is excess return by shorting puts –Situation reversed from before 1987 crash –Only for stocks –For commodities we can consider kurtosis trade Results later
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Possible Cause of Kurtosis Option market participants prefer far out of the money options because of large payoffs Causes high demand Willing to pay large transaction cost
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Empirical Observation 2 Implied volatilities are higher than historical:
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Empirical Observation 2 Called negative implied volatility premium Implied volatilities should be higher than historical There are various risks in writing an option even if a market maker is vega and delta hedged: –Jump risk
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Shorting Straddles If the premium is high for writing an option, then shorting at the money straddles could return excess profit:
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Results An Empirical Portfolio Perspective on Option Pricing Anomalies - 2005 by Joost Driessen, Pascal Maenhout Analyzed options from 1987-2001 for S&P500 Accounted for jump risk and transaction costs Assumed power utility
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Results Montly CEW for different values of RA Under transaction cost strategies return: –10.2% annually for short straddle (RA=2) –18.2% (RA=1) –11.5% annually for short put (RA=1) –19.4% (RA=2) Weights are negative in the portfolio for all values of RA
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Conclusion So based on data stock options ARE mispriced! We can use stochastic volatility parameters to identify mispriced options It is best to use a mixture of the cross- sectional and time-series for SV parameter estimation
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Thank You! Questions and comments!
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