|
The Center for Research
in International Finance
|
CRIF
Working Paper No. 02010
Static
Hedging of Standard Options
Title:
Static Hedging of Standard Options
Authors:
Peter Carr (New York University)
Liuren Wu (Fordham University)
Contact:
wu@fordham.edu
Keywords:
Jumps, option pricing, static hedging, Monte Carlo, S&P 500 index
options, stochastic volatility.
JEL
Classification: G12, G13, C52
Abstract:
We consider the hedging of derivative securities when the price
movement of the underlying asset can exhibit random jumps. Under a one
factor Markovian setting, we derive a spanning relation between a long
term option and a continuum of short term options. We then apply this
spanning relation to the static hedging of long term options with a
finite choice of short term, more liquid options based on a quadrature
rule. We use Monte Carlo simulation to determine the hedging error
introduced by the quadrature approximation and compare this hedging
error to the hedging error from a delta hedging strategy based on daily
rebalancing in the underlying futures. The simulation results indicate
that the two types of strategies have comparable hedging effectiveness
in the classic Black-Scholes environment, but that our static hedging
strategy strongly outperforms the dynamic delta-hedging strategy when
the underlying asset price movement is governed by Merton (1976)'s jump
diffusion model. Further simulation exercises indicate that these
results are robust to model misspecification, so long as one performs ad
hoc adjustments based on the observed implied volatility.
We also compare the hedging effectiveness of the two types of strategies
using more than six years of data on S&P 500 index options. We find
that a static hedge using just five call options outperforms daily
rebalancing on the delta hedging with the underlying futures. The
consistency of this result with our jump model simulations lends
empirical support for the existence of jumps of random size in the
movement of the S&P 500 index. We also find that our static strategy
performs best when the maturity of the options in the hedging portfolio
is close to the maturity of the target option being hedged. As the
maturity gap increases, the hedging performance deteriorates moderately,
indicating the likely existence of additional random factors such as
stochastic volatility.
Download
the paper: pdf file, ps file.
|