Publication | Open Access
Moneyness, Underlying Asset Volatility, and the Cross-Section of Option Returns
15
Citations
41
References
2022
Year
Empirical FinanceVolatility ModelingEngineeringOption ElasticityUnderlying Asset VolatilityFinancial MathematicsAsset PricingEconomic AnalysisExpected ReturnStatisticsFinancial EconometricsEconomicsOption PricingQuantitative FinanceFinanceMacro FinanceMultivariate Stochastic VolatilityFinancial EconomicsSystematic Volatility PricesBusiness
Abstract We study the effect of an asset’s volatility on the expected returns of European options on the asset. Deriving predictions from a stochastic discount factor model, we show that the effect depends on whether variations in the asset’s volatility are driven by systematic or idiosyncratic volatility. While idiosyncratic-volatility-induced variations only affect the option elasticity, systematic-volatility-induced variations also oppositely affect the expected return of the asset. Since the expected asset return (elasticity) effect dominates for options with more linear (non-linear) payoffs, systematic volatility prices sufficiently in-the-money (out-of-the-money) options with the opposite (same) sign as idiosyncratic volatility. Using single-stock calls as test assets, double-sorted portfolios and Fama–MacBeth (1973) regressions broadly support the model’s predictions.
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