Statistical Arbitrage in Options Markets by Graph Learning and Synthetic Long Positions
Yoonsik Hong and
Diego Klabjan
Papers from arXiv.org
Abstract:
Statistical arbitrages (StatArbs) driven by machine learning has garnered considerable attention in both academia and industry. Nevertheless, deep-learning (DL) approaches to directly exploit StatArbs in options markets remain largely unexplored. Moreover, prior graph learning (GL) -- a methodological basis of this paper -- studies overlooked that features are tabular in many cases and that tree-based methods outperform DL on numerous tabular datasets. To bridge these gaps, we propose a two-stage GL approach for direct identification and exploitation of StatArbs in options markets. In the first stage, we define a novel prediction target isolating pure arbitrages via synthetic bonds. To predict the target, we develop RNConv, a GL architecture incorporating a tree structure. In the second stage, we propose SLSA -- a class of positions comprising pure arbitrage opportunities. It is provably of minimal risk and neutral to all Black-Scholes risk factors under the arbitrage-free assumption. We also present the SLSA projection converting predictions into SLSA positions. Our experiments on KOSPI 200 index options show that RNConv statistically significantly outperforms GL baselines, and that SLSA consistently yields positive returns, achieving an average P&L-contract information ratio of 0.1627. Our approach offers a novel perspective on the prediction target and strategy for exploiting StatArbs in options markets through the lens of DL, in conjunction with a pioneering tree-based GL.
Date: 2025-08, Revised 2025-08
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