Microstructural biases in empirical tests of option pricing models |
| |
Authors: | Patrick Dennis Stewart Mayhew |
| |
Affiliation: | 1.McIntire School of Commerce,University of Virginia,Charlottesville,USA;2.Office of Economic Analysis,U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission,Washington,USA |
| |
Abstract: | This paper examines how noise in observed option prices arising from discrete prices and other microstructural frictions affects empirical tests of option pricing models and risk-neutral density estimation. The discrete tick size alone introduces enough noise to make model comparisons difficult, especially for lower-priced stocks. We demonstrate that microstructural noise can lead to incorrect inferences in the univariate diffusion test of Bakshi et al. (Rev Financ Stud 13:549–584, 2000), the transition density diffusion test of Aït-Sahalia (J Financ 57:2075–2112, 2002), and the speed-of-convergence test of Carr and Wu (J Financ 58:2581–2610, 2003). We also show that microstructural noise induces a bias into the implied risk-neutral moment estimators of Bakshi et al. (Rev Financ Stud 16:101–143, 2003). Even in active, liquid option markets, observation error is likely to reduce significantly the power of tests, and in some cases represents an important source of bias. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|