Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T10:10:44.817Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Sensitivity of American Options to Suboptimal Exercise Strategies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2010

Alfredo Ibáñez
Affiliation:
Caja Madrid, Torre Caja Madrid, Po de la Castellana, 189, 3a planta, 28046 Madrid, Spain. aibanero@cajamadrid.es
Ioannis Paraskevopoulos
Affiliation:
Caja Madrid, Torre Caja Madrid, Po de la Castellana, 189, 3a planta, 28046 Madrid, Spain. iparaske@cajamadrid.es

Abstract

The value of American options depends on the exercise policy followed by option holders. Market frictions, risk aversion, or a misspecified model, for example, can result in suboptimal behavior. We study the sensitivity of American options to suboptimal exercise strategies. We show that this measure is given by the Gamma of the American option at the optimal exercise boundary. More precisely, “if B is the optimal exercise price, but exercise is either brought forward when or delayed until a price has been reached, the cost of suboptimal exercise is given by ½ × Γ(B) × (B)2, where Γ(B) denotes the American option Gamma.” Therefore, the cost of suboptimal exercise is second-order in the bias of the exercise policy and depends on Gamma. This result provides new insights on American options.

Type
Research Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Michael G. Foster School of Business, University of Washington 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alili, L., and Kyprianou, A. E.. “Some Remarks on First Passage of Lévy Processes, the American Put and Pasting Principles.” Annals of Applied Probability, 15 (2005), 20622080.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, L., and Andreasen, J.. “Factor Dependence on Bermudan Swaptions: Fact or Fiction?Journal of Financial Economics, 62 (2001), 337.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Asquith, P.Convertible Bonds Are Not Called Late.” Journal of Finance, 50 (1995), 12751289.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berndt, A. “Estimating the Term Structure of Credit Spreads from Callable Corporate Bond Price Data.” Working Paper, Carnegie Mellon University (2004).Google Scholar
Black, F., and Scholes, M.. “The Pricing of Options and Corporate Liabilities.” Journal of Political Economy, 81 (1973), 637654.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brennan, M. J., and Schwartz, E. S.. “Convertible Bonds: Valuation and Optimal Strategies for Call and Conversion.” Journal of Finance, 32 (1977), 16991715.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brennan, M. J., and Schwartz, E. S.. “Evaluating Natural Resource Investments.” Journal of Business, 58 (1985), 135157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Broadie, M., and Detemple, J. B.. “Option Pricing: Valuation Models and Applications.” Management Science, 50 (2004), 11451177.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carpenter, J. N.; Stanton, R.; and Wallace, N.. “Optimal Exercise of Executive Stock Options and Implications for Firm Cost.” Journal of Financial Economics, 98 (2010), 315337.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, P.Randomization and the American Put.” Review of Financial Studies, 11 (1998), 597626.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, P.; Jarrow, R.; and Myneni, R.. “Alternative Characterization of American Put Options.” Mathematical Finance, 2 (1992), 87105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, P., and Yang, G.. “Simulating Bermudan Interest Rate Derivatives.” In Quantitative Analysis in Financial Markets, vol. II, Avellaneda, M., ed. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Co. (1997), 295316.Google Scholar
Chacko, G. C.; Jurek, J. W.; and Stafford, E.. “The Price of Immediacy.” Journal of Finance, 63 (2008), 12531290.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cochrane, J. H. “The Sensitivity of Tests of the Intertemporal Allocation of Consumption to Near-Rational Alternatives.” American Economic Review, 79 (1989), 319337.Google Scholar
Cox, J. C.; Ingersoll, J. E.; and Ross, S. A.. “A Theory of the Term Structure of Interest Rates.” Econometrica, 53 (1985), 385407.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dixit, A. K., and Pindyck, R. S.. Investment Under Uncertainty. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press (1994).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diz, F., and Finucane, T. J.. “The Rationality of Early Exercise Decisions: Evidence from the S&P 100 Index Options Market.” Review of Financial Studies, 6 (1993), 765797.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duffie, D.Dynamic Asset Pricing Theory, 3rd ed.Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press (2001).Google Scholar
Duffie, D., and Kan, R.. “A Yield-Factor Model of Interest Rates.” Mathematical Finance, 6 (1996), 379406.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duffie, D.; Liu, R.; and Poteshman, A. M.. “How American Option Puts are Exercised.” Working Paper, Stanford University (2005).Google Scholar
Duffie, D., and Singleton, K. J.. “Modeling Term Structures of Defaultable Bonds.” Review of Financial Studies, 12 (1999), 687720.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Engström, M.; Nordénand, L.; and Strömberg, A.. “Early Exercise of American Put Options: Investor Rationality on the Swedish Options Market.” Journal of Futures Markets, 20 (2000), 167188.3.0.CO;2-5>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerber, H. U., and Shiu, H. S. W.. “Martingale Approach to Pricing Perpetual American Options on Two Stocks.” Mathematical Finance, 6 (1996), 303322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glasserman, P.Monte Carlo Methods in Financial Engineering. New York, NY: Springer (2004).Google Scholar
Hall, B. J., and Murphy, K. J.. “Stock Options for Undiversified Executives.” Journal of Accounting and Economics, 33 (2002), 342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huddart, S., and Lang, M.. “Employee Stock Options Exercises: An Empirical Analysis.” Journal of Accounting and Economics, 21 (1996), 543.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Huddart, S., and Lang, M.. “Information Distribution within Firms: Evidence from Stock Option Exercises.” Journal of Accounting and Economics, 34 (2003), 331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hull, J., and White, A.. “Using Hull-White Interest Rate Trees.” Journal of Derivatives, 3 (1996), 2636.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ibáñez, A.Robust Pricing of the American Put Option: A Note on Richardson Extrapolation and the Early Exercise Premium.” Management Science, 49 (2003), 12101228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ibáñez, A.Factorization of European and American Option Prices under Complete and Incomplete Markets.” Journal of Banking and Finance, 32 (2008), 311325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ibáñez, A., and Velasco, C., “The Optimal Method for Pricing Bermudan Options by Simulation.” Working Paper, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid (2010).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ingersoll, J. E. Jr. “A Contingent-Claims Valuation of Convertible Securities.” Journal of Financial Economics, 4 (1977), 289322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jarrow, R.; Li, H.; Liu, S.; and Wu, C.. “Reduced-Form Valuation of Callable Corporate Bonds: Theory and Evidence.” Journal of Financial Economics, 95 (2010), 227248.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kim, I. J. “The Analytical Valuation of American Options.” Review of Financial Studies, 3 (1990), 547572.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamberton, D., and Villeneuve, S.. “Critical Price near Maturity for an American Option on a Dividend-Paying Stock.” Annals of Applied Probability, 13 (2003), 800815.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longstaff, F. A.; Santa-Clara, P.; and Schwartz, E. S.. “Throwing Away a Billion Dollars: The Cost of Suboptimal Exercise Strategies in the Swaptions Market.” Journal of Financial Economics, 62 (2001), 3966.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longstaff, F. A., and Schwartz, E. S.. “Valuing American Options by Simulation: A Simple Least-Squares Approach.” Review of Financial Studies, 14 (2001), 113147.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merton, R. C. “Theory of Rational Option Pricing.” Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science, 4 (1973), 141183.Google Scholar
Moel, A., and Tufano, P.. “When Are Real Options Exercised? An Empirical Study of Mine Closings.” Review of Financial Studies, 15 (2002), 3564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Poteshman, A. M., and Serbin, V.. “Clearly Irrational Financial Market Behavior: Evidence from the Early Exercise of Exchange Traded Stock Options.” Journal of Finance, 58 (2003), 3770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sarkar, S.Early and Late Calls of Convertible Bonds: Theory and Evidence.” Journal of Banking and Finance, 27 (2003), 13491374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stanton, R.Rational Prepayment and the Valuation of Mortgage-Backed Securities.” Review of Financial Studies, 8 (1995), 677708.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Svenstrup, M.On the Suboptimality of Single-Factor Exercise Strategies for Bermudan Swaptions.” Journal of Financial Economics, 78 (2005), 651684.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valkanov, R.; Yadav, P.; and Zhang, Y.. “Does the Early Exercise Premium Contain Information about Future Underlying Returns?” Working Paper, University of California, San Diego (2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vasicek, O.An Equilibrium Characterization of the Term Structure.” Journal of Financial Economics, 5 (1977), 177188.CrossRefGoogle Scholar