SPX, VIX and scale-invariant LSV\footnote{Local Stochastic Volatility}
Alexander Lipton and
Adil Reghai
Papers from arXiv.org
Abstract:
Local Stochastic Volatility (LSV) models have been used for pricing and hedging derivatives positions for over twenty years. An enormous body of literature covers analytical and numerical techniques for calibrating the model to market data. However, the literature misses a potent approach commonly used in physics and works with absolute (dimensional) variables rather than with relative (non-dimensional) ones. While model parameters defined in absolute terms are counter-intuitive for trading desks and tend to be heavily time-dependent, relative parameters are intuitive and stable, making it easy to steer the model adequately and consistently with its Profit and Loss (PnL) explanation power. We propose a specification that first explores historical data and uses physically well-defined relative quantities to design the model. We then develop an efficient hybrid method to price derivatives under this specification. We also show how our method can be used for robust scenario generation purposes - an important risk management task vital for buy-side firms.\footnote{The authors would like to thank Prof. Marcos Lopez de Prado and Dr. Vincent Davy Zoonekynd for valuable comments.}
Date: 2023-02
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-fmk
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