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Mastering R for Quantitative Finance

You're reading from   Mastering R for Quantitative Finance Use R to optimize your trading strategy and build up your own risk management system

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783552078
Length 362 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Time Series Analysis 2. Factor Models FREE CHAPTER 3. Forecasting Volume 4. Big Data – Advanced Analytics 5. FX Derivatives 6. Interest Rate Derivatives and Models 7. Exotic Options 8. Optimal Hedging 9. Fundamental Analysis 10. Technical Analysis, Neural Networks, and Logoptimal Portfolios 11. Asset and Liability Management 12. Capital Adequacy 13. Systemic Risks Index

Exchange options


Exchange options grant the holder the right to exchange one risky asset to another risky asset at maturity. It is easy to see that simple options are special forms of exchange options where one of the risky assets is a constant amount of money (the strike price).

The pricing formula of an exchange option was first derived by Margrabe, 1978. The model assumptions, the pricing principles, and the resultant formula of Margrabe are very similar to (more precisely, the generalization of) those of Black, Scholes, and Merton. Now we will show how to determine the value of an exchange option.

Let's denote the spot prices of the two risky assets at time t by S1t and S2t. We assume that these prices under the risk neutral probability measure (Q) follow geometric Brownian motion with drifts equal to the risk-free rate (r), shown as and .

Here, W1 and W2 are standard Wiener processes under Q, with correlation ρ. You may observe that here, the assets have no yield (for example, stocks...

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