Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Probability theory: basic notions
- 2 Maximum and addition of random variables
- 3 Continuous time limit, Ito calculus and path integrals
- 4 Analysis of empirical data
- 5 Financial products and financial markets
- 6 Statistics of real prices: basic results
- 7 Non-linear correlations and volatility fluctuations
- 8 Skewness and price-volatility correlations
- 9 Cross-correlations
- 10 Risk measures
- 11 Extreme correlations and variety
- 12 Optimal portfolios
- 13 Futures and options: fundamental concepts
- 14 Options: hedging and residual risk
- 15 Options: the role of drift and correlations
- 16 Options: the Black and Scholes model
- 17 Options: some more specific problems
- 18 Options: minimum variance Monte–Carlo
- 19 The yield curve
- 20 Simple mechanisms for anomalous price statistics
- Index of most important symbols
- Index
16 - Options: the Black and Scholes model
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Probability theory: basic notions
- 2 Maximum and addition of random variables
- 3 Continuous time limit, Ito calculus and path integrals
- 4 Analysis of empirical data
- 5 Financial products and financial markets
- 6 Statistics of real prices: basic results
- 7 Non-linear correlations and volatility fluctuations
- 8 Skewness and price-volatility correlations
- 9 Cross-correlations
- 10 Risk measures
- 11 Extreme correlations and variety
- 12 Optimal portfolios
- 13 Futures and options: fundamental concepts
- 14 Options: hedging and residual risk
- 15 Options: the role of drift and correlations
- 16 Options: the Black and Scholes model
- 17 Options: some more specific problems
- 18 Options: minimum variance Monte–Carlo
- 19 The yield curve
- 20 Simple mechanisms for anomalous price statistics
- Index of most important symbols
- Index
Summary
The heresies we should fear are those which can be confused with orthodoxy.
(Jorge Luis Borges, The Theologians.)Ito calculus and the Black-Scholes equation
After having discussed at length the peculiarities of the continuous time Gaussian limit in the previous chapters, it is interesting to describe how option pricing theory is usually introduced using Ito's stochastic differential calculus. This framework is extremely powerful and allows one to obtain rather quickly some of the results that were painfully derived in the previous chapters, such as the optimal hedge or the independence of the price on the drift. Once the limitations of the Black-Scholes model and the subtleties of the continuous limit are fully understood, the ‘blind’ use of Ito calculus to obtain a first approximation to the price of derivatives becomes justified. However, we are convinced that in order to go beyond Black-Scholes and study more realistic models, one should be prepared to abandon Ito calculus and the world of partial differential equations on which most of mathematical finance relies.
The Gaussian Bachelier model
We first assume that the price itself (and not its logarithm) follows a continuous time random walk, with drift m and diffusion constant D. We also assume that the interest rate r is equal to zero.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Theory of Financial Risk and Derivative PricingFrom Statistical Physics to Risk Management, pp. 290 - 299Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003