- Joined
- 5/2/06
- Messages
- 11,954
- Points
- 273
Note: Received via email today. Thanks to Dr. Peter Carr who gave us first-to-publish permission on QuantNet
Traders and quants both know that an option's premium and its gamma are intimately related. This quiz will help you learn whether you are a trader or a quant. Assume the Black Scholes model with zero rates and dividends. Let \(t_0\) be the valuation time and let \(S_0 > 0\) be the initial stock price.
Under risk neutral measure \(\mathbf{Q}\), the stock price process is:
where \(\sigma > 0\) is the stock's (constant) volatility and \(W\) is a standard Brownian motion. Let:
be the call value function. Consider a call which is initially at or out of the money i.e. \(S_0 \leq K\)
The three equations below all relate the call's initial premium \(C(S_0,t_0;K,T)\) to the gamma it has over its life:
1. Initial call premium is profit from gamma scalping at the initial stock price:
3. Initial call premium is cost of starting the hedge, rehedging continuously over time, and winding up at expiry:
Two of the 3 equations are correct and one of them is wrong. Which one is wrong?
Quiz: Are You a Trader or a Quant?
Traders and quants both know that an option's premium and its gamma are intimately related. This quiz will help you learn whether you are a trader or a quant. Assume the Black Scholes model with zero rates and dividends. Let \(t_0\) be the valuation time and let \(S_0 > 0\) be the initial stock price.
Under risk neutral measure \(\mathbf{Q}\), the stock price process is:
\(dS_t = \sigma S_t dW_t, \qquad t \geq t_0,\)
where \(\sigma > 0\) is the stock's (constant) volatility and \(W\) is a standard Brownian motion. Let:
\(C(S,t;K,T) \equiv E^{\mathbf{Q}} [(S_T - K)^+| S_t = S]\)
be the call value function. Consider a call which is initially at or out of the money i.e. \(S_0 \leq K\)
The three equations below all relate the call's initial premium \(C(S_0,t_0;K,T)\) to the gamma it has over its life:
1. Initial call premium is profit from gamma scalping at the initial stock price:
\( C(S_0,t_0;K,T) = \int_{t_0}^T \frac{\sigma^2}{2} S_0^2 C_{ss}(S_0,t;K,T)dt. \)
2. Initial call premium is initial expected value of the profit from gamma scalping at all future dates:\( C(S_0,t_0;K,T) = E^{\mathbf{Q}}_0 \int_{t_0}^T \frac{\sigma^2}{2} S_t^2 C_{ss}(S_t,t;K,T)dt. \)
3. Initial call premium is cost of starting the hedge, rehedging continuously over time, and winding up at expiry:
\( C(S_0,t_0;K,T) = S_0 C_s(S_0,t_0;K,T) + \int_{t_0}^T S_t C_{ss}(S_t,t;K,T) dS_t - K 1(S_T > K). \)
Two of the 3 equations are correct and one of them is wrong. Which one is wrong?