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Volatility and Correlation: The Perfect Hedger and the Fox
By: Riccardo RebonatoeBook Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Imprint: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Format: Adobe Encrypted (DRM)
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In Volatility and Correlation 2 nd edition: The Perfect Hedger and the Fox , Rebonato looks at derivatives pricing from the angle of volatility and correlation. With both practical and theoretical applications, this is a thorough update of the highly successful Volatility & Correlation – with over 80% new or fully reworked material and is a must have both for practitioners and for students.
The new and updated material includes a critical examination of the ‘perfect-replication’ approach to derivatives pricing, with special attention given to exotic options; a thorough analysis of the role of quadratic variation in derivatives pricing and hedging; a discussion of the informational efficiency of markets in commonly-used calibration and hedging practices. Treatment of new models including Variance Gamma, displaced diffusion, stochastic volatility for interest-rate smiles and equity/FX options.
The book is split into four parts. Part I deals with a Black world without smiles, sets out the author’s ‘philosophical’ approach and covers deterministic volatility. Part II looks at smiles in equity and FX worlds. It begins with a review of relevant empirical information about smiles, and provides coverage of local-stochastic-volatility, general-stochastic-volatility, jump-diffusion and Variance-Gamma processes. Part II concludes with an important chapter that discusses if and to what extent one can dispense with an explicit specification of a model, and can directly prescribe the dynamics of the smile surface.
Part III focusses on interest rates when the volatility is deterministic. Part IV extends this setting in order to account for smiles in a financially motivated and computationally tractable manner. In this final part the author deals with CEV processes, with diffusive stochastic volatility and with Markov-chain processes.
Praise for the First Edition:
“In this book, Dr Rebonato brings his penetrating eye to bear on option pricing and hedging.… The book is a must-read for those who already know the basics of options and are looking for an edge in applying the more sophisticated approaches that have recently been developed.”
—Professor Ian Cooper, London Business School
“Volatility and correlation are at the very core of all option pricing and hedging. In this book, Riccardo Rebonato presents the subject in his characteristically elegant and simple fashion…A rare combination of intellectual insight and practical common sense.”
—Anthony Neuberger, London Business School
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| Title of Business & Economics eBook: Volatility and Correlation: The Perfect Hedger and the Fox | |
| Release Date: 09-06-2005 | |
| Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. |
This eBook download is available in the following formats:
| Parent title | Volatility and Correlation: The... |
|---|---|
| Encrypted (DRM) | Yes |
| SKU | 9780470091401 |
| File size | 8958 |
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| Note | Excellent navigation features are available via Adobe such as bookmarks and a quick access table of contents. Text search is easily accessible. An Adobe DRM-protected file is different than a pdf file in that it uses Adobe DRM (Digital Rights Management) technology, which authors and publishers use to protect their content from illegal online distribution and to set certain privileges such as restrictions on copying and printing. |
Volatility and Correlation: The Perfect Hedger and the Fox
Chapter One
Theory and Practice of Option Modelling
1.1 The Role of Models in Derivatives Pricing
1.1.1 What Are Models For?
The idea that the price of a financial instrument might be arrived at using a complex mathematical formula is relatively new, and can be traced back to the Black-and-Scholes (1973) formula. Of course, formulae were used before then for pricing purposes, for instance in order to convert the price of a bond into its gross redemption yield. However, these early (pre Black-and-Scholes) formulae by and large provided a very transparent transformation from one set of variables to another, and did not carry along a heavy baggage of model assumptions. The Black-and-Scholes formula changed all that, and we now live in a world where it is accepted that the value of certain illiquid derivative securities can be arrived at on the basis of a model (the acceptance of this is the basis of the practice of marking-to-model).
The models that developed from the family tree that has Black-and-Scholes at its roots shared the common assumptions that the estimation of the drift (growth rate, trend) component of the dynamics of the relevant financial driver was not relevant to arrive at the price of the derivative product. This insight directly follows from the concept of payoff replication, and is discussed in detail in this book in Chapter 2.
In order to implement these models practitioners paid more and more attention to, and began to collect, direct empirical market data at a very 'atomistic' (often transactional) level. This was done for several reasons: for instance, for assessing the reasonableness of a model'
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