Analysis of market volatility via a dynamically purified option price process

The paper studies methods of dynamic estimation of volatility for financial time series. We suggest to estimate the volatility as the implied volatility inferred from some artificial ‘dynamically purified' price process that in theory allows to eliminate the impact of the stock price movements....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Luong, C., Dokuchaev, Nikolai
Format: Journal Article
Published: World Scientific 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/10701
Description
Summary:The paper studies methods of dynamic estimation of volatility for financial time series. We suggest to estimate the volatility as the implied volatility inferred from some artificial ‘dynamically purified' price process that in theory allows to eliminate the impact of the stock price movements. The complete elimination would be possible if the option prices were available for continuous sets of strike prices and expiration times. In practice, we have to use only finite sets of available prices. We discuss the construction of this process from the available option prices using different methods. In order to overcome the incompleteness of the available option prices, we suggest several interpolation approaches, including the first order Taylor series extrapolation and quadratic interpolation. We examine the potential of the implied volatility derived from this proposed process for forecasting of the future volatility, in comparison with the traditional implied volatility process such as the volatility index VIX.