The Black-Scholes model is the most common tool for pricing options, with one of its main addumptions being that returns on the underlying asset follow a normal distributin. In practice, the bulk of the empirical evidence shows most financial returns to be characterised by non-normalities, a feature which, in turn, is associated with mispricing of the Black-Scholes model. In view of this evidence an option price model is developed which allows for skewness and kurtosis in the underlying returns processs. Using Bayesdian methodology, inference about the process is conducted implicitly using observed option priced, with posterior distributions estimated for the parameters of the alternative models. To discriminate between models a number of s...
In this paper, we propose a method that predicts a distribution of the implied volatility functions ...
Bayesian statistical methods are naturally oriented towards pooling in a rigorous way information fr...
We investigate systematic and unsystematic option pricing biases in (a) pure jump Lévy, (b) jump-dif...
A Bayesian approach to option pricing is presented, in which posterior inference about the underlyin...
A Bayesian approach to option pricing is presented, in which posterior inference about the underlyin...
This paper investigates the statistical properties of the Black-Scholes option price under a Bayesia...
This paper investigates the statistical properties of the Black-Scholes option price under a Bayesia...
This Paper shows that many of the empirical biases of the Black and Scholes option pricing model can...
While stochastic volatility models improve on the option pricing error when compared to the Black-Sc...
A new class of option price models is developed and applied to options on the Australian S&P200 Inde...
The valuation of options and many other derivative instruments requires an estimation of exante or f...
This paper shows how one can compute option prices from a Bayesian inference viewpoint, using a GARC...
This thesis consists of three chapters devoted to both empirical and theoretical aspects of option p...
International audienceThe mispricing of the deep-in-the money and deep-out-the-money generated by th...
In this paper we apply Bayesian methods to estimate a stochastic volatility model using both the pri...
In this paper, we propose a method that predicts a distribution of the implied volatility functions ...
Bayesian statistical methods are naturally oriented towards pooling in a rigorous way information fr...
We investigate systematic and unsystematic option pricing biases in (a) pure jump Lévy, (b) jump-dif...
A Bayesian approach to option pricing is presented, in which posterior inference about the underlyin...
A Bayesian approach to option pricing is presented, in which posterior inference about the underlyin...
This paper investigates the statistical properties of the Black-Scholes option price under a Bayesia...
This paper investigates the statistical properties of the Black-Scholes option price under a Bayesia...
This Paper shows that many of the empirical biases of the Black and Scholes option pricing model can...
While stochastic volatility models improve on the option pricing error when compared to the Black-Sc...
A new class of option price models is developed and applied to options on the Australian S&P200 Inde...
The valuation of options and many other derivative instruments requires an estimation of exante or f...
This paper shows how one can compute option prices from a Bayesian inference viewpoint, using a GARC...
This thesis consists of three chapters devoted to both empirical and theoretical aspects of option p...
International audienceThe mispricing of the deep-in-the money and deep-out-the-money generated by th...
In this paper we apply Bayesian methods to estimate a stochastic volatility model using both the pri...
In this paper, we propose a method that predicts a distribution of the implied volatility functions ...
Bayesian statistical methods are naturally oriented towards pooling in a rigorous way information fr...
We investigate systematic and unsystematic option pricing biases in (a) pure jump Lévy, (b) jump-dif...