We report simple regressions and Granger causality tests in order to understand the pattern of implied volatilities across exercise prices. We employ all calls and puts transacted between 16:00 and 16:45 on the Spanish IBEX-35 index from January 1994 to April 1996. Transaction costs, proxied by the bid–ask spread, seem to be a key determinant of the curvature of the volatility smile. Moreover, time to expiration, the uncertainty associated with the market and the relative market momentum are also important variables in explaining the smile.Publicad
This paper studies the behavior of the smile in the Warsaw Stock Exchange (WSE) during the volatile ...
We present a new method to measure the intraday relationship between movements of implied volatility...
AbstractThis paper studies the behavior of the smile in the Warsaw Stock Exchange (WSE) during the v...
We report simple regressions and Granger causality tests in order to understand the pattern of impli...
We report simple regressions and rather sophisticated linear and nonlinear Granger causality test in...
The implied volatility smile refers to the variation in implied volatilities across options which ...
The “smile effect” is a result of an empirical observation of the options’ implied volatility with t...
The "smile effect" is a result of an empirical observation of the options' implied volatility with t...
This paper studies the behavior of the implied volatility function (smile) when the true distributio...
If options are correctly priced, the interpretation of volatility in the Black-Scholes model (as ide...
The “smile effect ” is a result of an empirical observation of the options ’ implied volatility with...
In this paper, we examine the predictability of observed volatility smiles in three major European i...
This paper tests whether the true smile in implied volatilities is flat. The smile in observed Black...
On the basis of transaction data, this paper analyzes the strike proÞle of implied volatilities of G...
In this paper, we examine two important propositions for the Indian options market: (1) the relation...
This paper studies the behavior of the smile in the Warsaw Stock Exchange (WSE) during the volatile ...
We present a new method to measure the intraday relationship between movements of implied volatility...
AbstractThis paper studies the behavior of the smile in the Warsaw Stock Exchange (WSE) during the v...
We report simple regressions and Granger causality tests in order to understand the pattern of impli...
We report simple regressions and rather sophisticated linear and nonlinear Granger causality test in...
The implied volatility smile refers to the variation in implied volatilities across options which ...
The “smile effect” is a result of an empirical observation of the options’ implied volatility with t...
The "smile effect" is a result of an empirical observation of the options' implied volatility with t...
This paper studies the behavior of the implied volatility function (smile) when the true distributio...
If options are correctly priced, the interpretation of volatility in the Black-Scholes model (as ide...
The “smile effect ” is a result of an empirical observation of the options ’ implied volatility with...
In this paper, we examine the predictability of observed volatility smiles in three major European i...
This paper tests whether the true smile in implied volatilities is flat. The smile in observed Black...
On the basis of transaction data, this paper analyzes the strike proÞle of implied volatilities of G...
In this paper, we examine two important propositions for the Indian options market: (1) the relation...
This paper studies the behavior of the smile in the Warsaw Stock Exchange (WSE) during the volatile ...
We present a new method to measure the intraday relationship between movements of implied volatility...
AbstractThis paper studies the behavior of the smile in the Warsaw Stock Exchange (WSE) during the v...