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This document provides an overview of key concepts for pricing financial derivatives using no-arbitrage models. It discusses: 1) Mathematical techniques like partial differential equations, stochastic calculus, and binary trees that are used to price derivatives. 2) Key economic variables like time, value, uncertainty, and information that are factors in pricing models. 3) Principles like the law of one price and how models are applied to assets like stocks, bonds, and derivatives. 4) The single period binary model and how it replicates derivative payoffs using portfolios of basic assets, with no arbitrage determining the price.

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Aamir Khan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views

Detailed Topic List

This document provides an overview of key concepts for pricing financial derivatives using no-arbitrage models. It discusses: 1) Mathematical techniques like partial differential equations, stochastic calculus, and binary trees that are used to price derivatives. 2) Key economic variables like time, value, uncertainty, and information that are factors in pricing models. 3) Principles like the law of one price and how models are applied to assets like stocks, bonds, and derivatives. 4) The single period binary model and how it replicates derivative payoffs using portfolios of basic assets, with no arbitrage determining the price.

Uploaded by

Aamir Khan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Detailed Topic List

Introduction

1. Absolute vs. relative pricing


2. Mathematical techniques
• Partial differential equations (Black-Scholes approach)
• Stochastic calculus (Ito Calculus approach)
• Binary trees (Ross-Cox-Rubinstein approach)
3. Economic variables
• time - instant, interval
• value - nominal quantity, nominal dollar, relative valuation
• uncertainty - classical probability
• information - current and future economic environment
4. Economic principles
• Law of one price
• Application areas - stock option valuation, foreign exchange valuation, fixed in-
come asset and derivative valuation
5. Financial instrument example
• ’Fair’ coin flip gamble (Forward)
– Properties
– Applications - domestic equity option valuation, foreign exchange rate depen-
dent assets, interest rate dependent assets
• ’Unfair’ coin flip gamble (Option)
– Properties compared to ’Fair’ gamble
• Introduction wrap-up

Single Period Binary Model

1. Binary tree model


• Primary assets (Equity market)
– Stock (risky)
– Money market (risk-free)

1
Su = uS0 B = RB0
H H u
S0 B0
TS = dS TB = RB
d d d 0

(a) Stock price (b) Bond price

Figure 1: Stock and Bond Trees

– Stock growth rates (u,d)


– Money market period accumulation factor R
Outcome Stock Money Market
– Sample space H Su = 120 Bu = 110
T Sd = 80 Bd = 110
• Asset purchase and sale
– Stock purchase
– Money market deposit
– Stock short sale
– Money market loan
– Comparison of asset uncertainty
• Derived assets
– European call option, option expiration, strike price
– Option payoff formula max(ST − K, 0) and option tree
H Cu
C0 =?
T Cd

– Payoff diagram

Call option
Option value C

S-K

0
0 K S
Stock price S

• Portfolios
– Bank loan and stock short sale

2
– Portfolio (s = 2, b = 1.1) trees and portfolio set-up cost

H 120 H 110
2.0 * 100 + 1.1 * 100
T 80 T 110
(a) stock (b) bond

Figure 2: Portfolio

2. Arbitrage
• Arbitrage portfolio
– Type 1 and type 2 arbitrage portfolios
– Portfolio examples
• No-arbitrage conditions
– No-arbitrage condition on stock and money market growth rates: d < R < u.
– Construction of arbitrage portfolio when condition is not satisfied
• Uniqueness of risk-free asset return used as pricing methodology
3. Replicating portfolio
• Law of one price
– Law of one price in a single period binary model

A A
S L ⇒ S=L
B , B
(a) Asset 1 (b) Asset 2 (c)

Figure 3: Law of one price

– Arbitrage portfolio when law of one price is broken


• Replicating portfolio: Synthetic option built from portfolio of primary assets
– Replicating an option payoff with a portfolio of primary assets:
     
Su Bu Cu
s +b =
Sd Bd Cd

– Solving a 2 x 2 system of linear equations with determinants


– Replicating portfolio components: stock quantity s and money market b
– Replicating portfolio set-up cost as no-arbitrage option price: C0 = sS0 + bB0

3
• Replicating portfolio algebra
– Linear combination of risk profiles
– Stock quantity (purchase or short sale) (s) and money market ’quantity’ (de-
posit or loan) (b)
s = CSuu −C
−Sd
d uCd −dCu
, b = RB 0 (u−d)

Cu −Cd uCd −dCu


– Portfolio set-up cost C0 = Su −Sd
+ R(u−d)

– European call option stock component always positive: s > 0


– Option price independent of probability of coin flip being heads
C0 −sS0
– Alternative computation of money market component: b = B0

4. Arrow-Debreu state prices (λu , λd )


• State hpricing formulas
i h from rearranged
i replicating portfolio set-up cost
R−d u−R
C0 = R(u−d) Cu + R(u−d) Cd

• Unit asset (Arrow-Debreu state risk profile) pricing

H 1 H 0
λu λd
T 0 T 1
(a) Up state (b) Dn state

Figure 4: State Prices

     
Cu 1 0
• Arbitrary risk profiles and state prices: = Cu + Cd
Cd 0 1
• State prices from arbitrary primary assets
• Equivalent no-arbitrage conditions
– Strictly positive state prices for no-arbitrage market model: λu > 0, λd > 0
– Consequence of a zero state price
– Discounting and risk adjustment components of state prices
R−d 1 u−R 1
λu = ∗ , λd = ∗
|u {z
− d} R
|{z} |u {z
− d} R
|{z}
risk discounting risk discounting
component component component component

– Equivalence of positive state prices and no-arbitrage condition on primary


asset growth rates
– Zero coupon bond price as sum of state prices:

• Financial engineering examples

4
H 1 H 0 H 1
λu + λd = zcb
T 0 T 1 T 1
(a) up state (b) down state (c) bond

Figure 5: zcb = λu + λd

– Naked call
– Stock purchase
– Covered call
5. Numeraires
• Numeraire examples: Domestic currency; Inflation-adjusted dollars; Present value
accounting
• Money market numeraire (present value) and stock numeraire computation
• Numeraire probability measure (pN N
u , pd ):
N N Su N Sd N S0
pu + pd = 1, Nu pu + Nd pd = N0
• Numeraire probability from state prices:
pRu = RRu λ0 u , pRd = RRd λ0 d
• Martingale condition and numeraire pricing formula
– Binary probability model
∗ sample space Ω
∗ probability p
∗ random variable X
∗ expected value Ep (X)
∗ variance Ep (X − Ep (X))2
Y0 Y

– No-arbitrage pricing and the martingale condition: R0
= Ep R

– Martingale condition applied to normalized primary assets to compute nu-


meraire probabilities
– Martingale pricing formula
6. Risk-neutral pricing
R−d u−R
• Risk-neutral probability measure: pu = u−d
, pd = u−d

• Risk-neutral pricing
• Risk-free growth rates of all normalized assets under risk-neutral probability:
R = upu + dpd
• Risk-neutral probability and state prices

5
• Importance of stock price volatility for no-arbitrage option price
7. (Optional) State price density pricing
• Radon-Nikodym derivative and state price density function
• State prices and state price density
• Pricing kernel
8. Alternative pricing approach relationships
• Replicating portfolios
• State prices
• Numeraire pricing
• Risk-neutral pricing
• (Optional) State density pricing

Applications of single period option pricing

1. Forward contract on stock


Su − F
H
0
T
Sd − F

2. Exchange rates and foreign currency options

Xu Rd Rf Rf Xu
H H H H
X0 1 1 X0
T Xd T Rd T Rf T RX
f d

(a) X Rate (b) Dom MM (c) For MM (d) For MM $

Figure 6: Foreign Exchange

• Direct quote exchange rates


• Domestic and foreign money markets
• Replicating portfolio and set-up cost
Rd
Rf −d
• Risk-neutral probabilities: pu = u−d
, pd = 1 − pu
pu pd
• State prices: λu = Rd
, λd = Rd

• European call option on foreign currency


K Rd
• Forward exchange rate and interest rate parity: X0
= Rf

6
3. Interest rates and zero coupon bonds
• Interest rate characteristics: when set, when start, when end, how reported, how
computed
• Examples: spot rate, short rate, forward rate, LIBOR
• Zero coupon bond (ZCB)
• Single period zero coupon bond price (P(t, T )) and money market single period
accumulation factor (R)
• Short rate process, accumulation process, discount process
• Coupon bond as portfolio of ZCB
• Risk-neutral pricing of ZCB using short rate tree
• Risk-neutral pricing of bond options
• Single period and arbitrary period forward rate
• Relationships between ZCB price, spot rate and forward rate
4. American option
• Intrinsic value and hold value
• Backward induction tree folding for American put option
• Non-optimality of early exercise for American call option on non-dividend paying
stock

Put-call parity relations

K
1. Put-call parity on stock option: C0 + R
= P0 + S0
K X0
2. Put-call parity on exchange rate option: C0 + Rd
= P0 + Rf

3. Put-call parity on zero coupon bond option: Ct + KP(t, T ) = Pt + P(t, S)

Multi-period Binomial Model

1. Multi-period binomial tree


• Recombinant and non-recombinant trees
• Folding back (backward recursion) using single-period risk-neutral pricing
• Computing replicating portfolio money market component from option price and
stock delta
• Self-financing strategies
2. Multi-period option pricing examples
• European call option

7
• American put option
3. Cox-Ross-Rubinstein (CRR) multi-period binary model
• One, two and three period state prices
• Combinatorics and Pascal’s triangle
• n-period state prices and option pricing formula
• n-period risk-neutral pricing formula
• Relationship between n-period state prices and n-period risk-neutral probabilities
• Location of first in-the-money node
4. Black-Scholes formula for binary model
• European call option as portfolio of share and dollar digital options
• Discrete probability distributions, binomial distribution and complementary bi-
nomial distribution
• Stock numeraire and share digital valuation
• Bond numeraire and dollar digital valuation
• Black-Scholes binary model European call option formula

Multi-period Arrow-Debreu state prices

1. Jamshidian forward recursion state prices


2. State price tree in CRR model - five period example

Options

1. Path dependent options and non-recombinant trees


2. Option payoff diagrams (intrinsic value diagrams)
• European call and put options
• Forward and break forward
• Collar, digital, chooser path independent options
• Barrier, lookback, Asian, one-click call, shout path dependent options
3. Option pricing

Interest Rate Models

1. Rates and bond price process


2. Short rates and state prices forward induction tree construction

8
3. Black-Derman-Toy (BDT) short rate model
• Calibration to market prices
• Interest-sensitive asset valuation
4. Bootstrap Zero Coupon Bond prices

Additional topics (if time permits)

1. Model parameter estimation


• Historical volatility estimation
• Implied volatility estimation
• Root-finding techniques
2. Implied trees
• Implied volatility trees
• Implied binomial trees
3. Additional fixed income models
• Ho-Lee model
• LIBOR market model
• Pricing interest rate caps, floors and swaps
4. Incomplete markets and no-arbitrage pricing intervals

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