Recovering Stochastic Processes from Option Prices
Jens Carsten Jackwerth and
Mark Rubinstein
A chapter in Derivative Securities Pricing and Modelling, 2012, pp 123-153 from Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract:
How do stock prices evolve over time? The standard assumption of geometric Brownian motion, questionable as it has been right along, is even more doubtful in light of the recent stock market crash and the subsequent prices of U.S. index options. With the development of rich and deep markets in these options, it is now possible to use options prices to make inferences about the risk-neutral stochastic process governing the underlying index. We compare the ability of models including Black–Scholes, naïve volatility smile predictions of traders, constant elasticity of variance, displaced diffusion, jump diffusion, stochastic volatility, and implied binomial trees to explain otherwise identical observed option prices that differ by strike prices, times-to-expiration, or times. The latter amounts to examining predictions of future implied volatilities. Certain naïve predictive models used by traders seem to perform best, although some academic models are not far behind. We find that the better-performing models all incorporate the negative correlation between index level and volatility. Further improvements to the models seem to require predicting the future at-the-money implied volatility. However, an “efficient markets result” makes these forecasts difficult, and improvements to the option-pricing models might then be limited.
Date: 2012
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:csefzz:s1569-3759(2012)0000094008
DOI: 10.1108/S1569-3759(2012)0000094008
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