Skewness and Kurtosis in S&P 500 Index Returns Implied by Option Prices
The Black-Scholes (1973) model frequently misprices deep-in-the-money and deep-out-of-the-money options. Practitioners popularly refer to these strike price biases as volatility smiles. In this paper we examine a method to extend the Black-Scholes model to account for biases induced by nonnormal skewness and kurtosis in stock return distributions. The method adapts a Gram-Charlier series expansion of the normal density function to provide skewness and kurtosis adjustment terms for the Black-Scholes formula. Using this method, we estimate option-implied coefficients of skewness and kurtosis in S&P 500 stock index returns. We find significant nonnormal skewness and kurtosis implied by option prices.
Year of publication: |
1996
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Authors: | Corrado, Charles J ; Su, Tie |
Published in: |
Journal of Financial Research. - Southern Finance Association - SFA, ISSN 0270-2592. - Vol. 19.1996, 2, p. 175-92
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Publisher: |
Southern Finance Association - SFA Southwestern Finance Association - SWFA |
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