Model Uncertainty and Option Markets in Heterogeneous Economies
Preprint
- 1 February 2005
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper provides option pricing and volume implications for an incomplete market economy with heterogenous agents who face model uncertainty and disagree on the dividend growth rate. Market incompleteness makes options non-redundant while heterogeneity creates a link between differences in beliefs and option volumes. We solve for both option prices and volumes and test the joint empirical implications using SP500 index option data. We use survey data to build an Index of Dispersion in Beliefs and find that a model which takes into account information heterogeneity can explain the dynamics of option volume better than reduced-form models with stochastic volatility. Moreover, its hedging performance is superior. Finally, we find that the Index of Dispersion in Beliefs is correlated with changes in the shape of the smile and it forecasts future realized volatility even after controlling for the current implied volatility.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stock Return Characteristics, Skew Laws, and the Differential Pricing of Individual Equity OptionsThe Review of Financial Studies, 2003
- The Market for Crash RiskPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,2001
- Do Call Prices and the Underlying Stock Always Move in the Same Direction?The Review of Financial Studies, 2000
- A model of dynamic equilibrium asset pricing with heterogeneous beliefs and extraneous riskJournal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 2000
- Post-'87 crash fears in the S&P 500 futures option marketJournal of Econometrics, 2000
- Nonparametric Estimation of State‐Price Densities Implicit in Financial Asset PricesThe Journal of Finance, 1998
- Option Trading, Price Discovery, and Earnings News Dissemination*Contemporary Accounting Research, 1997
- Return Volatility and Trading Volume: An Information Flow Interpretation of Stochastic VolatilityThe Journal of Finance, 1996
- An empirical examination of information, differences of opinion, and trading activityJournal of Financial Economics, 1996
- Asymmetric information and optionsThe Review of Financial Studies, 1993