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Marketconform Valuation Of Options 1st Edition Tobias Herwig Auth

  • SKU: BELL-1975092
Marketconform Valuation Of Options 1st Edition Tobias Herwig Auth
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Marketconform Valuation Of Options 1st Edition Tobias Herwig Auth instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.51 MB
Pages: 106
Author: Tobias Herwig (auth.)
ISBN: 9783540308379, 9783540308386, 3540308377, 3540308385
Language: English
Year: 2006
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Marketconform Valuation Of Options 1st Edition Tobias Herwig Auth by Tobias Herwig (auth.) 9783540308379, 9783540308386, 3540308377, 3540308385 instant download after payment.

1. 1 The Area of Research In this thesis, we will investigate the 'market-conform' pricing of newly issued contingent claims. A contingent claim is a derivative whose value at any settlement date is determined by the value of one or more other underlying assets, e. g. , forwards, futures, plain-vanilla or exotic options with European or American-style exercise features. Market-conform pricing means that prices of existing actively traded securities are taken as given, and then the set of equivalent martingale measures that are consistent with the initial prices of the traded securities is derived using no-arbitrage arguments. Sometimes in the literature other expressions are used for 'market-conform' valuation - 'smile-consistent' valuation or 'fair-market' valuation - that describe the same basic idea. The seminal work by Black and Scholes (1973) (BS) and Merton (1973) mark a breakthrough in the problem of hedging and pricing contingent claims based on no-arbitrage arguments. Harrison and Kreps (1979) provide a firm mathematical foundation for the Black-Scholes- Merton analysis. They show that the absence of arbitrage is equivalent to the existence of an equivalent martingale measure. Under this mea­ sure the normalized security price process forms a martingale and so securities can be valued by taking expectations. If the securities market is complete, then the equivalent martingale measure and hence the price of any security are unique.

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