• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 11
  • 5
  • Tagged with
  • 16
  • 16
  • 11
  • 6
  • 5
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Filtered Historical SimulationValue at Risk for Options : A Dimension Reduction Approach to Model the VolatilitySurface Shifts

Gunnarsson, Fredrik January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
2

Optimal Decisions in the Equity Index Derivatives Markets Using Option Implied Information

Barkhagen, Mathias January 2015 (has links)
This dissertation is centered around two comprehensive themes: the extraction of information embedded in equity index option prices, and how to use this information in order to be able to make optimal decisions in the equity index option markets. These problems are important for decision makers in the equity index options markets, since they are continuously faced with making decisions under uncertainty given observed market prices. The methods developed in this dissertation provide robust tools that can be used by practitioners in order to improve the quality of the decisions that they make. In order to be able to extract information embedded in option prices, the dissertation develops two different methods for estimation of stable option implied surfaces which are consistent with observed market prices. This is a difficult and ill-posed inverse problem which is complicated by the fact that observed option prices contain a large amount of noise stemming from market micro structure effects. Producing estimated surfaces that are stable over time is important since otherwise risk measurement of derivatives portfolios, pricing of exotic options and calculation of hedge parameters will be prone to include significant errors. The first method that we develop leads to an optimization problem which is formulated as a convex quadratic program with linear constraints which can be solved very efficiently. The second estimation method that we develop in the dissertation makes it possible to produce local volatility surfaces of high quality, which are consistent with market prices and stable over time. The high quality of the surfaces estimated with the second method is the crucial input to the research which has resulted in the last three papers of the dissertation. The stability of the estimated local volatility surfaces makes it possible to build a realistic dynamic model for the equity index derivatives market. This model forms the basis for the stochastic programming (SP) model for option hedging that we develop in the dissertation. We show that the SP model, which uses generated scenarios for the squared local volatility surface as input,  outperforms the traditional hedging methods that are described in the literature. Apart from having an accurate view of the variance of relevant risk factors, it is when building a dynamic model also important to have a good estimate of the expected values, and thereby risk premia, of those factors. We use a result from recently published research which lets us recover the real-world density from only a cross-section of observed option prices via a local volatility model. The recovered real-world densities are then used in order to identify and estimate liquidity premia that are embedded in option prices. We also use the recovered real-world densities in order to test how well the option market predicts the realized statistical characteristics of the underlying index. We compare the results with the performance of commonly used models for the underlying index. The results show that option prices contain a premium in the tails of the distribution. By removing the estimated premia from the tails, the resulting density predicts future realizations of the underlying index very well.
3

Análise de componentes principais na dinâmica da volatilidade implícita e sua correlação com o ativo objeto. / Principal component analysis over the implied volatility dynamic and its correlation with underlying.

Avelar, André Gnecco 03 July 2009 (has links)
Como a volatilidade é a única variável não observada nas fórmulas padrão de apreçamento de opções, o mercado financeiro utiliza amplamente o conceito de volatilidade implícita, isto é, a volatilidade que ao ser aplicada na fórmula de apreçamento resulte no preço correto (observado) das opções negociadas. Por isso, entender como as volatilidades implícitas das diversas opções de dólar negociadas na BM&F, o objeto de nosso estudo, variam ao longo do tempo e como estas se relacionam é importante para a análise de risco de carteiras de opções de dólar/real bem como para o apreçamento de derivativos cambiais exóticos ou pouco líquidos. A proposta de nosso estudo é, portanto, verificar se as observações da literatura técnica em diversos mercados também são válidas para as opções de dólar negociadas na BM&F: que as volatilidades implícitas não são constantes e que há uma relação entre as variações das volatilidades implícitas e as variações do valor do ativo objeto. Para alcançar este objetivo, aplicaremos a análise de componentes principais em nosso estudo. Com esta metodologia, reduziremos as variáveis aleatórias que representam o processo das volatilidades implícitas em um número menor de variáveis ortogonais, facilitando a análise dos dados obtidos. / Volatility is the only unobserved variable in the standard option pricing formulas and hence implied volatility is a concept widely adopted by the financial market, meaning the volatility which would make the formula yield the options real market price. Therefore, understanding how the implied volatility of the options on dollar traded at BM&F, the subject of our study, vary over time is important for risk analysis over dollar option books and for pricing of exotic or illiquid derivatives Our works proposal is to verify if the observations made by the technical literature over several markets could also be applied to the options on dollar traded at BM&F: implied volatilities do vary over time and there is a relation between this variation and the variation of the underlying asset price. In order to fulfill these goals, we will apply principal component analysis in our study. This methodology will help us analyze the data by reducing the number of variables that represent the implied volatility process into a few orthogonal variables.
4

Pricing of American options with discrete dividends using a PDE and a volatility surface while calculating derivatives with automatic differentiation

Hjelmberg, David, Lagerström, Björn January 2014 (has links)
In this master thesis we have examined the possibility of pricing multiple American options, on an underlying asset with discrete dividends, with a finite difference method. We have found a good and stable way to price one American option by solving the BSM PDE backwards, while also calculating the Greeks of the option with automatic differentiation. The list of Greeks for an option is quite extensive since we have been using a local volatility surface. We have also tried to find a way to price several American options simultaneously by solving a forward PDE. Unfortunately, we haven't found any previous work that we could use with our local volatility surface, while still keeping down the computational time. The closest we got was to calculate the value of a compound option in a forward mode, but in order to use this to value an American option, we needed to go through an iterative process which calculated a forward or backward European PDE in every step.
5

Análise de componentes principais na dinâmica da volatilidade implícita e sua correlação com o ativo objeto. / Principal component analysis over the implied volatility dynamic and its correlation with underlying.

André Gnecco Avelar 03 July 2009 (has links)
Como a volatilidade é a única variável não observada nas fórmulas padrão de apreçamento de opções, o mercado financeiro utiliza amplamente o conceito de volatilidade implícita, isto é, a volatilidade que ao ser aplicada na fórmula de apreçamento resulte no preço correto (observado) das opções negociadas. Por isso, entender como as volatilidades implícitas das diversas opções de dólar negociadas na BM&F, o objeto de nosso estudo, variam ao longo do tempo e como estas se relacionam é importante para a análise de risco de carteiras de opções de dólar/real bem como para o apreçamento de derivativos cambiais exóticos ou pouco líquidos. A proposta de nosso estudo é, portanto, verificar se as observações da literatura técnica em diversos mercados também são válidas para as opções de dólar negociadas na BM&F: que as volatilidades implícitas não são constantes e que há uma relação entre as variações das volatilidades implícitas e as variações do valor do ativo objeto. Para alcançar este objetivo, aplicaremos a análise de componentes principais em nosso estudo. Com esta metodologia, reduziremos as variáveis aleatórias que representam o processo das volatilidades implícitas em um número menor de variáveis ortogonais, facilitando a análise dos dados obtidos. / Volatility is the only unobserved variable in the standard option pricing formulas and hence implied volatility is a concept widely adopted by the financial market, meaning the volatility which would make the formula yield the options real market price. Therefore, understanding how the implied volatility of the options on dollar traded at BM&F, the subject of our study, vary over time is important for risk analysis over dollar option books and for pricing of exotic or illiquid derivatives Our works proposal is to verify if the observations made by the technical literature over several markets could also be applied to the options on dollar traded at BM&F: implied volatilities do vary over time and there is a relation between this variation and the variation of the underlying asset price. In order to fulfill these goals, we will apply principal component analysis in our study. This methodology will help us analyze the data by reducing the number of variables that represent the implied volatility process into a few orthogonal variables.
6

Implied volatility with HJM–type Stochastic Volatility model

Cap, Thi Diu January 2021 (has links)
In this thesis, we propose a new and simple approach of extending the single-factor Heston stochastic volatility model to a more flexible one in solving option pricing problems.  In this approach, the volatility process for the underlying asset dynamics depends on the time to maturity of the option. As this idea is inspired by the Heath-Jarrow-Morton framework which models the evolution of the full dynamics of forward rate curves for various maturities, we name this approach as the HJM-type stochastic volatility (HJM-SV)  model. We conduct an empirical analysis by calibrating this model to real-market option data for underlying assets including an equity  (ABB stock) and a market index (EURO STOXX 50), for two separated time spans from Jan 2017 to Dec 2017 (before the COVID-19 pandemic) and from Nov 2019 to Nov 2020 (after the start of COVID-19 pandemic). We investigate the optimal way of dividing the set of option maturities into three classes, namely, the short-maturity, middle-maturity, and long-maturity classes. We calibrate our HJM-SV model to the data in the following way, for each class a single-factor Heston stochastic volatility model is calibrated to the corresponding market data. We address the question that how well the new HJM-SV model captures the feature of implied volatility surface given by the market data.
7

[en] PREDICABILITY DINAMICS IN BRAZILIAN CALL OPTIONS IMPLIED VOLATILITY SURFACES / [pt] PREVISIBILIDADE NA DINÂMICA DA SUPERFÍCIE DE VOLATILIDADE IMPLÍCITA EM OPÇÕES DE COMPRA DE AÇÕES BRASILEIRAS

DIEGO AGUIAR FONSECA 03 August 2018 (has links)
[pt] O presente trabalho busca explorar a previsibilidade na dinâmica temporal em modelos lineares de superfícies de volatilidade implícita estimados para opções de compra de ações brasileiras. Resultados de estudos anteriores, sob a abordagem usualmente empregada de estimação de modelos lineares em função do preço de exercício e do tempo até o vencimento a partir de dados de corte transversal sobre cada contrato disponível em dado instante, como Dumas, Fleming e Whaley (1998), revelam grande instabilidade nos coeficientes estimados ao longo do tempo. Por conseguinte, a incapacidade desta perspectiva em descrever a dinâmica intertemporal da estrutura, contrariando a observação empírica de volatilidade variável no tempo. A partir destas evidências e das conclusões de Heston e Nandi (2000), que reportaram significativa dependência da trajetória para a volatilidade dos retornos do índice S&P 500, Gonçalves e Guidolim (2006), propuseram um modelo em dois estágios, que aplica vetores autoregressivos para capturar a presença de variação temporal dos coeficientes de um modelo linear. A contribuição deste trabalho está em aplicar o Modelo proposto à realidade do mercado brasileiro de opções de ações, incipiente em liquidez e horizonte de negociação se comparado ao mercado norte americano, adaptando critérios a fim de validar sua aplicabilidade neste contexto em termos estatísticos e econômicos. Os resultados comprovam a superioridade desta abordagem em relação a outras comparáveis na literatura, mas não a capacidade de gerar retornos acima da média na presença de custos de transação contra a referência natural da taxa livre de risco. O que sugere a adequação à hipótese de eficiência de mercado. / [en] O The present study aims to explore predictability in temporal dynamics regarding linear models of the implied volatility surfaces estimated for Brazilian stocks options. Previous results, by usual approach of fitting linear models linking implied volatility to time to maturity and moneyness, available for each cross-section of option contracts at a point in time, as in Dumas, Fleming and Whaley (1998), suggest that estimated parameters of such models are highly unstable over time. Therefore, this approach isn t capable of replicating various IVS s shapes, contrary to the empirical evidence of implied volatility varying with options strike price and date of expiration. Based on these evidences and in Heston and Nandi (2000), that exploit the information on path-dependency in volatility contained in the spot S&P 500 index, Gonçalves e Guidolim (2006) proposed a two-stage approach to modeling and forecasting the S&P 500 index options IVS. In the second-stage they model the dynamics of the cross-sectional first-stage coefficients by means of vector autoregression models. The contribution of this work is to apply the proposed model to the reality of the Brazilian stock options, incipient in terms of liquidity and trading horizon dimensions when compared to the U.S. market, adapting criterians to validate its applicability in this context in statistical and economical sense. The results demonstrate the superiority of this approach over comparable literature, but not the ability to generate abnormal profits in the presence of transaction costs in excess of the benchmark of the risk-free rate. This indicates adaptation to the market efficiency hypothesis.
8

Modelagem de superfícies de volatilidade para opções com baixa liquidez sobre pares de moedas, cujos componentes apresentam opções líquidas em outros pares

Consonni, Ricardo 12 August 2011 (has links)
Submitted by Ricardo Consonni (ricardo.consonni@gmail.com) on 2011-09-09T12:42:48Z No. of bitstreams: 1 +Dissetacao RC 2011 - v1g - Revisado.pdf: 2814391 bytes, checksum: f5888f2effddf979aa33bd15b87760d2 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Gisele Isaura Hannickel (gisele.hannickel@fgv.br) on 2011-09-09T13:14:56Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 +Dissetacao RC 2011 - v1g - Revisado.pdf: 2814391 bytes, checksum: f5888f2effddf979aa33bd15b87760d2 (MD5) / Approved for entry into archive by Gisele Isaura Hannickel (gisele.hannickel@fgv.br) on 2011-09-09T13:15:04Z (GMT) No. of bitstreams: 1 +Dissetacao RC 2011 - v1g - Revisado.pdf: 2814391 bytes, checksum: f5888f2effddf979aa33bd15b87760d2 (MD5) / Made available in DSpace on 2011-09-09T13:17:32Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 +Dissetacao RC 2011 - v1g - Revisado.pdf: 2814391 bytes, checksum: f5888f2effddf979aa33bd15b87760d2 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2011-08-12 / Este trabalho apresenta um modelo para determinação da superfície de volatilidades de um par de moedas cujas opções têm baixa liquidez, utilizando superfícies de volatilidade com maior liquidez, de pares de moedas em que as moedas estudadas sejam uma de suas componentes. Esse objetivo é atingido através da utilização de um modelo de volatilidade estocástica. A calibração de seus parâmetros é feita a partir dos valores de mercado de Butterfly Spreads e Risk Reversals dos pares de moedas líquidos. O trabalho contribui em relação à literatura no sentido de ampliar a cobertura de strikes e vencimentos considerados, permitindo que, tanto opções pouco líquidas e fora do dinheiro, como notas estruturadas com opções embutidas possam ser mais adequadamente apreçadas. / This work presents a model for determining the volatility surface of a currency pair whose options have low liquidity, using higher liquidity volatility surfaces of other currency pairs, in which the desired currencies are one of their components. This goal is achieved through the use of a stochastic volatility model. The calibration of its parameters is done from market values of the Butterfly Spreads and Risk Reversals of the liquid-currency pairs. This work contributes to the literature in an effort to broaden the scope of strikes and maturities considered, allowing for both illiquid and out of-the-money options, as well as structured notes with embedded options, to be more appropriately priced.
9

Parameter Stability in Additive Normal Tempered Stable Processes for Equity Derivatives

Alcantara Martinez, Eduardo Alberto January 2023 (has links)
This thesis focuses on the parameter stability of additive normal tempered stable processes when calibrating a volatility surface. The studied processes arise as a generalization of Lévy normal tempered stable processes, and their main characteristic are their time-dependent parameters. The theoretical background of the subject is presented, where its construction is discussed taking as a starting point the definition of Lévy processes. The implementation of an option valuation model using Fourier techniques and the calibration process of the model are described. The thesis analyzes the parameter stability of the model when it calibrates the volatility surface of a market index (EURO STOXX 50) during three time spans. The time spans consist of the periods from Dec 2016 to Dec 2017 (after the Brexit and the US presidential elections), from Nov 2019 to Nov 2020 (during the pandemic caused by COVID-19) and a more recent time period, April 2023. The findings contribute to the understanding of the model itself and the behavior of the parameters under particular economic conditions.
10

Equity derivatives markets

Detlefsen, Kai 19 October 2007 (has links)
Seit der Entdeckung der arbitragefreien Bewertung hat sich das Gebiet finance grundlegend geändert - sowohl in der Theorie als auch in der Anwendung. Märkte für Derivate haben sich entwickelt und Optionen dienen heutzutage als Basis- und als Absicherungsinstrumente. In dieser Dissertation betrachten wir einige Märkte für Aktienderivate. Wir beginnen mit statistischen Analysen des Marktes für europäische Optionen und des Marktes für Varianzswaps, weil diese Produkte die hauptsächlichen Absicherungsinstrumente für komplexe Optionen sind. Dann betrachten wir verschiedene Optionspreismodelle und ihre Kalibrierung an beobachtete Preisoberflächen. Schließlich untersuchen wir die Verbindung zwischen Optionspreisen und dem grundlegenden ökonomischen Konzept der Risikoaversion anhand des empirischen Preiskernes. / Since the ideas of arbitrage free pricing were born, finance has changed radically - both in theory and practice. Derivatives markets have evolved and options serve nowadays as underlyings and as hedging instruments. In this thesis, we consider some markets for equity derivatives. We start by statistical analysis of the markets for European options and variance swaps because these products are important for hedging more complex claims. Then we consider different option pricing models and their calibration to observed price surfaces. Finally, we investigate the connection between option prices and the fundamental economic concept of risk aversion by the empirical pricing kernel.

Page generated in 0.0921 seconds