On the Efficacy of Fourier Series Approximations for Pricing European and Digital Options
This paper investigates several competing procedures for computing the price of European and digital options in which the underlying model has a characteristic function that is known in at least semi-closed form. The algorithms for pricing the options investigated here are the half-range Fourier cosine series, the half-range Fourier sine series and the full-range Fourier series. The performance of the algorithms is assessed in simulation experiments which price options in a Black-Scholes world where an analytical solution is available and for a simple affine model of stochastic volatility in which there is no closed-form solution. The results suggest that the half-range sine series approximation is the least effective of the three proposed algorithms. It is rather more difficult to distinguish between the performance of the half-range cosine series and the full-range Fourier series. There are however two clear differences. First, when the interval over which the density is approximated is relatively large, the full-range Fourier series is at least as good as the half-range Fourier cosine series, and outperforms the latter in pricing out-of-the-money call options, in particular with maturities of three months or less. Second, the computational time required by the half-range Fourier cosine series is uniformly longer than that required by the full-range Fourier series for an interval of fixed length. Taken together, these two conclusions make a strong case for the merit of pricing options using a full-range range Fourier series as opposed to a half-range Fourier cosine series.
Year of publication: |
2013-01-24
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Authors: | Hurn, A S ; Lindsay, Kenenth A ; McClelland, Andrew |
Institutions: | National Centre for Econometric Research (NCER) |
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