3 research outputs found
Option pricing under stochastic volatility: the exponential Ornstein-Uhlenbeck model
We study the pricing problem for a European call option when the volatility
of the underlying asset is random and follows the exponential
Ornstein-Uhlenbeck model. The random diffusion model proposed is a
two-dimensional market process that takes a log-Brownian motion to describe
price dynamics and an Ornstein-Uhlenbeck subordinated process describing the
randomness of the log-volatility. We derive an approximate option price that is
valid when (i) the fluctuations of the volatility are larger than its normal
level, (ii) the volatility presents a slow driving force toward its normal
level and, finally, (iii) the market price of risk is a linear function of the
log-volatility. We study the resulting European call price and its implied
volatility for a range of parameters consistent with daily Dow Jones Index
data.Comment: 26 pages, 6 colored figure
Probability distribution of returns in the exponential Ornstein-Uhlenbeck model
We analyze the problem of the analytical characterization of the probability
distribution of financial returns in the exponential Ornstein-Uhlenbeck model
with stochastic volatility. In this model the prices are driven by a Geometric
Brownian motion, whose diffusion coefficient is expressed through an
exponential function of an hidden variable Y governed by a mean-reverting
process. We derive closed-form expressions for the probability distribution and
its characteristic function in two limit cases. In the first one the
fluctuations of Y are larger than the volatility normal level, while the second
one corresponds to the assumption of a small stationary value for the variance
of Y. Theoretical results are tested numerically by intensive use of Monte
Carlo simulations. The effectiveness of the analytical predictions is checked
via a careful analysis of the parameters involved in the numerical
implementation of the Euler-Maruyama scheme and is tested on a data set of
financial indexes. In particular, we discuss results for the German DAX30 and
Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50, finding a good agreement between the empirical data
and the theoretical description.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures and 3 tables. New section with real data analysis
and related references added, some minor typos corrected. Accepted for
publication on JSTA