Non-Spanning Identification of Scheduled Event Risk in Option Pricing
Tenghan Zhong
Papers from arXiv.org
Abstract:
Short-dated index options make scheduled macro-announcement risk visible in market prices, but visibility does not imply identification: a flexible no-event surface fitted to event-spanning quotes can absorb event premia, while a jump calibrated without event-spanning quotes is unidentified. To separate the continuous surface from the scheduled jump, we model Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) decisions, Consumer Price Index (CPI) releases, and nonfarm payroll (NFP) reports as deterministic-time jumps in risk-neutral option pricing and propose a non-spanning identification protocol. Non-spanning expiries identify the no-event volatility surface, event-spanning training quotes calibrate the scheduled jump, and held-out event-spanning quotes are used only for pricing evaluation. On PM-settled S\&P 500 index (SPX) options from May 2022 to August 2025, Gaussian and two-component mixture jumps improve held-out event-spanning pricing, with the clearest gains in robust median pricing errors and in event-volatility option combinations (straddles and strangles) rather than directional risk reversals. A contaminated-surface stress test confirms the identification concern: allowing event-spanning training quotes into the no-event surface fit produces strong held-out performance by absorbing event premia rather than identifying scheduled jump risk. An amortized mixture density network (MDN) benchmark shows limited cross-event transfer: pure leave-one-event-out amortization reduces implied-volatility errors but not mean dollar or mean spread-normalized pricing errors, while the scale-calibrated variant restores Gaussian-level performance yet remains below event-specific mixture calibration. Scheduled-jump identification is strongest for CPI and FOMC and weaker for NFP.
Date: 2026-06, Revised 2026-06
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