Path-dependent Option Valuation when the Underlying Path is Discontinuous

Path-dependent Option Valuation when the Underlying Path is Discontinuous
Author: Chunsheng Zhou
Publisher:
Total Pages: 21
Release: 1997
Genre:
ISBN:

The payoffs of path-dependent options depend not only on the nal values, but also on the sample paths of the prices of the underlying assets. A rigorous modeling of the under-lying asset price processes which can appropriately describe the sample paths is therefore critical for pricing path-dependent options. This paper allows for discontinuities in the sample paths of the underlying asset prices by assuming that these prices follow jump di usion processes. A general yet tractable approach is presented to value a variety of path-dependent options with discontinuous processes. The numerical examples show that ignoring the jump risk may lead to serious biases in path- dependent option pricing.

The Black-Scholes Model

The Black-Scholes Model
Author: Marek Capiński
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 179
Release: 2012-09-13
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1107001692

Master the essential mathematical tools required for option pricing within the context of a specific, yet fundamental, pricing model.

Path Dependent Option Pricing

Path Dependent Option Pricing
Author: Andrew Matacz
Publisher:
Total Pages: 22
Release: 2001
Genre:
ISBN:

In this paper I develop a new computational method for pricing path dependent options. Using the path integral representation of the option price, I show that in general it is possible to perform analytically a partial averaging over the underlying risk-neutral diffusion process. This result greatly eases the computational burden placed on the subsequent numerical evaluation. For short-medium term options it leads to a general approximation formula that only requires the evaluation of a one dimensional integral. I illustrate the application of the method to Asian options and occupation time derivatives.

Preference-Free Option Pricing with Path-Dependent Volatility

Preference-Free Option Pricing with Path-Dependent Volatility
Author: Steven L. Heston
Publisher:
Total Pages: 12
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

This paper shows how one can obtain a continuous-time preference-free option pricing model with a path-dependent volatility as the limit of a discrete-time GARCH model. In particular, the continuous-time model is the limit of a discrete-time GARCH model of Heston and Nandi (1997) that allows asymmetry between returns and volatility. For the continuous-time model, one can directly compute closed-form solutions for option prices using the formula of Heston (1993). Toward that purpose, we present the necessary mappings, based on Foster and Nelson (1994), such that one can approximate (arbitrarily closely) the parameters of the continuous-time model on the basis of the parameters of the discrete-time GARCH model. The discrete-time GARCH parameters can be estimated easily just by observing the history of asset prices.Unlike most option pricing models that are based on the absence of arbitrage alone, a parameter related to the expected return/risk premium of the asset does appear in the continuous-time option formula. However, given other parameters, option prices are not at all sensitive to the risk premium parameter, which is often imprecisely estimated.

Mathematical Modeling and Methods of Option Pricing

Mathematical Modeling and Methods of Option Pricing
Author: Lishang Jiang
Publisher: World Scientific
Total Pages: 344
Release: 2005
Genre: Science
ISBN: 9812563695

From the perspective of partial differential equations (PDE), this book introduces the Black-Scholes-Merton's option pricing theory. A unified approach is used to model various types of option pricing as PDE problems, to derive pricing formulas as their solutions, and to design efficient algorithms from the numerical calculation of PDEs.

Path-dependent Option Pricing

Path-dependent Option Pricing
Author: Gudbjort Gylfadottir
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

ABSTRACT: This dissertation is concerned with the pricing of path-dependent options where the underlying asset is modeled as a continuous-time exponential Lévy process and is monitored at discrete dates. These options enable their users to tailor random payoff outcomes to their particular risk profiles and are widely used by hedgers such as large multinational corporations and speculators alike. The use of continuous-time models since the breakthrough paper of Black and Scholes has been greatly facilitated by advances in stochastic calculus and the mathematical elegance it provides. The recent financial crisis started in 2008 has highlighted the importance of models that incorporate the possibility of sudden, large jumps as well as the higher likelihood of adverse outcomes as compared with the classical Black-Scholes model. Increasingly, exponential Lévy processes have become preferred alternatives, thanks in particular to the explicit Lévy-Khinchin representation of their characteristic functions. On the other hand, the restriction of monitoring dates to a discrete set increases the mathematical and computational complexity for the pricing of path-dependent options even in the classical Black-Scholes model. This dissertation develops new techniques based on recent advances in the fast evaluation and inversion of Fourier and Hilbert transforms as well as classical results in fluctuation theory, particularly those involving random walk duality and ladder epochs.

Path Dependant Option Pricing Under Levy Processes

Path Dependant Option Pricing Under Levy Processes
Author: Conall O'Sullivan
Publisher:
Total Pages: 24
Release: 2005
Genre:
ISBN:

A model is developed that can price path dependent options when the underlying process is an exponential Levy process with closed form conditional characteristic function. The model is an extension of a recent quadrature option pricing model so that it can be applied with the use of Fourier and Fast Fourier transforms. Thus the model possesses nice features of both transform and quadrature option pricing techniques since it can be applied for a very general set of underlying Levy processes and can handle exotic path dependent features. The model is applied to European and Bermudan options for geometric Brownian motion, a jump-diffusion process, a variance gamma process and a normal inverse Gaussian process. However it must be noted that the model can also price other path dependent exotic options such as lookback and Asian options.

Exotic Options: A Guide To Second Generation Options (2nd Edition)

Exotic Options: A Guide To Second Generation Options (2nd Edition)
Author: Peter Guangping Zhang
Publisher: World Scientific
Total Pages: 696
Release: 1998-06-17
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9814496146

This is the first systematic and extensive book on exotic options. The book covers essentially all popular exotic options currently trading in the Over-the-Counter (OTC) market, from digitals, quantos, spread options, lookback options, Asian options, vanilla barrier options, to various types of exotic barrier options and other options. Each type of exotic options is largely written in a separate chapter, beginning with the basic concepts of the products and then moving on to how to price them in closed-form solutions. Many pricing formulae and analyses which have not previously appeared in the literature are included and illustrated with detailed examples. It will be of great interest to traders, marketers, analysts, risk managers, professors, graduate students, and anyone who is interested in what is going on in the rapidly changing financial market.

Mathematical Modeling And Methods Of Option Pricing

Mathematical Modeling And Methods Of Option Pricing
Author: Lishang Jiang
Publisher: World Scientific Publishing Company
Total Pages: 343
Release: 2005-07-18
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9813106557

From the unique perspective of partial differential equations (PDE), this self-contained book presents a systematic, advanced introduction to the Black-Scholes-Merton's option pricing theory.A unified approach is used to model various types of option pricing as PDE problems, to derive pricing formulas as their solutions, and to design efficient algorithms from the numerical calculation of PDEs. In particular, the qualitative and quantitative analysis of American option pricing is treated based on free boundary problems, and the implied volatility as an inverse problem is solved in the optimal control framework of parabolic equations.