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- 8/28/08
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alright I get it, thanks for the explanation. I admit that I'm a bit shocked that summing the total vega is widely used, when at the same time the skew is also widely used, and that I see nowhere the mention that these 2 are incomptatible (or least, I never see the mention that a no-skew assumption is made when summing the vegas)
So like I said in the previous post, you look at the vega in conjunction with your smile risk. Your smile risk is important too, but vega is a first order problem and smile risk is second. This is why traders are concerned with vega before considering smile risk. There are ways to try to approximate your total volatility smile risk from ATM implied volatility going up or down 1 vol. Vega, as we're discussing it, holds risk reversals and butterflies constant and bumps the whole smile in parallel. Technically speaking this should be done in delta space rather than in strike specific space, so if we're looking at a specific OTM strike, this will shift by a slightly different amount from the ATM volatility, as it is no longer the same delta as it was before. In any case, as you rightly point out, whatever the perturbation in the smile the vega number captures does not tell the whole story of our risk. It might stand to reason, for instance, that if some event occurs that moves ATM volatility higher, OTM options should increase even more than the ATM point as fat tails become more likely than they were before. One thing you can do to adjust for this is to bump your smile greeks such that the parameters of your smile model remain constant. For example, in a SABR model, if you bump your ATM vol higher but leave your butterflies constant, your implied vol of vol will be lower than it was before as the wingyness on a vol adjusted basis has become smaller. To account for this, we might calculate a risk number that, in addition to the vol bump, also bumps the butterflies in order to preserve the value of the implied vol of vol within the model. The same could be done simultaneously for the underlying vs implied vol correlation parameter. The resulting pnl shock number would in theory be more reflective of the risk you run if ATM implied vol were to move meaningfully, as it captures the larger move in OTM options. You could also simply make a judgement call as to where you think the volatilities of OTM options will go if ATM volatility moves a given amount. I do want to stress, however, from a practical point of view, if today you were given a portfolio to hedge consisting of a bunch of delta hedged options, the first thing you would do is buy or sell ATM options to hedge your vega - which would eliminate the vast majority of your market risk - and then over time work out of your smile risk which moves a lot more slowly.