Abstract
Barrier options are financial derivative contracts that
are activated or deactivated according to the crossing of specified
barriers by an underlying asset price. Exact models for pricing
barrier options assume continuous monitoring of the underlying
dynamics, usually a stock price. Barrier options in traded markets,
however, nearly always assume less frequent observation, e.g. daily
or weekly. These situations require approximate solutions to the
pricing problem. We present a new approach to pricing such
discretely monitored barrier options that may be applied in many
realistic situations. In particular, we study daily monitored
up-and-out call options of the European type with a single
underlying stock. The approach is based on numerical approximation
of the transition probability density associated with the stochastic
differential equation describing the stock price dynamics, and
provides accurate results in less than one second whenever a
contract expires in a year or less. The flexibility of the method
permits more complex underlying dynamics than the Black and Scholes
paradigm, and its relative simplicity renders it quite easy to
implement.
Anno
2007
Tipo pubblicazione
Altri Autori
Skaug C., Naess A.