Who Buys and Who Sells Options: The Role and Pricing of Options in an Economy with Background Risk
In this paper, we derive an equilibrium in which some investors buy call/put options on the market portfolio while others sell them. Since investors are assumed to have similar risk-averse preferences, the demand for these contracts is not explained by differences in the shape of utility functions. Rather, it is the degree to which agents face other, non-hedgeable, background risks that determines their risk-taking behavior in the model. We show that investors with low or no background risk have a concave sharing rule, i.e., they sell options on the market portfolio, whereas investors with high background risk have a convex sharing rule and buy these options.
Year of publication: |
1998-02
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Authors: | Subrahmanyam, Marti G. ; Franke, Günter ; Stapleton, Richard C. |
Institutions: | Finance Department, Stern School of Business |
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