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Comparative empirical study of binomial call-option pricing methods using S&P 500 index data
Institution:1. Department of Tourism and Hospitality, TransWorld University, No. 1221, Zhennan Rd., Douliu City, Yunlin County 640, Taiwan;2. Department of Economics, Soochow University, No. 56, Kueiyang Street, Section 1, Taipei 100, Taiwan;1. Patrick E. Molony Professor, Department of Economics, Auburn University, 138 Miller Hall, Auburn, AL 36849, United States;2. Department of Economics, University of California Santa Cruz, 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz, CA 95064, United States;1. Department of Management Sciences, COMSATS University Islamabad, Attock Campus, Pakistan;2. Rennes School of Business, Rennes City, Brittany, France;3. Schulich School of Business, York University, Toronto, Canada;4. Department of Economics, Pusan National University, Busan, Republic of Korea;1. Research Center of the Central China for Economic and Social Development, Nanchang University, 330031 Nanchang, PR China;2. School of Economics and Management, Nanchang University, 330031 Nanchang, PR China;3. Business School, Hunan University, 410082 Changsha, PR China
Abstract:In this paper, several binomial models are tested empirically on S&P500 Index on the levels of tradability, proximity to market (RMS) prices and profitability, especially close to expiration day. These comparisons will be carried out for many different business environments, including different market trends and moneyness levels traded. Among the models under analysis we assess the quality of the SH model, developed by the authors in previous work, in relation to other models. The option price in the SH model is affected by the players’ assessments about the behavior of the prices of the underlying asset up to the expiration day and by their “eagerness” levels (i.e., players’ readiness to respond to a given bid proposed by their opponent). We found that for all models, the higher the moneyness, the greater the proximity of models prices to actual market prices and that, eagerness parameters have a decisive effect on tradability. We also found that there was no correlation between the degree of proximity of modeled prices to actual prices and the expected profit gained by players that act according to a given model and that the SH model traded relatively small number of options. The expected profit is highest for the SH model in the ITM and ATM for days that are far from the expiration day.
Keywords:Binomial models  Empirical study  Option pricing  S&P 500
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