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B**O
Dr. Derman is the professor we all need.
Read the title for this review again. I purchased all the books he authored. They are all worth every penny, if he had charged more I would have paid it. I think he is giving us a discount to gain from his sleepless nights. All his books will be read and re-read. Thank you sir.
M**A
An excellent book to help quants to think on their own and develop good models.
Emanuel Derman’s “The Volatility Smile” is an excellent book for those who have learned something about derivatives and now need to think on their own.More than just repeating known formulas and theorems, the author is always careful to distinguish between theories and models, alternating concepts and practice (including end-of-chapter exercises).I really enjoyed Chapters 14 to 18, dealing with Local Volatility and its consequences. As one of the first quants (Bruno Dupire being the other) to develop and publish a local volatility model, Derman explains clearly what is the goal of the model and shows how to observe and test its assumptions.Recommended for those who are learning quantitative finance and an useful addition even to experienced practitioners, who might benefit from the clear expositions in the book in order to better understand how far their results should carry and how better to communicate them.
F**T
Good Book
As a textbook, it is really a wonderful introduction! Tell you many fundamental ideas. Love it.
B**1
Emanuel Derman's books are always amazing and inspirational - My Life as A Quant
Emanuel Derman's books are always amazing and inspirational - My Life as A Quant, Models.Behaving.Badly and now The Volatility Smile, an excellent book full of insight and intuition, an outstanding guide for exciting volatility world!
P**A
Fantastic
To explain the concepts, author relied on intuition first then on math.
A**N
Accessible advanced treatment of post Black-Scholes financial models
When I worked at Nortel I occasionally got stock options. Suppose Nortel shares were trading at $100 per share. I would be given the option of buying, say, 50 shares in six months time at a strike price of $80 per share.Suppose Nortel stock went up in those six months to $120 per share. Those 50 shares would sell at $6,000. But I could buy them at $80, costing me $4,000.By buying at a discount and then immediately selling, I would realise a profit of $2,000. I guess they thought I would thereby be totally incentivized to work tirelessly for stock appreciation.As the Internet boom faded, I was seldom in the money. Nortel’s shares were under water, and my options were worthless. So at the time of issue, how should they have been priced?Plainly the closer the option expiry date to the option trade date, the less the share price uncertainty - which lowers the option price (often called the premium). However, if the shares are more volatile there is more chance that they will soar above the strike price - that’s got to raise the option price.The Black-Scholes equation is a partial differential equation which describes the rate of change of option price over time as a function of stock price. The stock price is assumed to be varying as a random walk around its trend with some volatility. The equation can be solved to give option prices, similar to the call option example I discussed above.Black-Scholes has just one unobservable parameter, the stock volatility. Other parameters in the model, the time to maturity, the strike price, the risk-free interest rate, and the current underlying stock price are all observable. In principle an option's theoretical value is a monotonically increasing function of implicit volatility.The Black-Scholes model implies that the stock price volatility is flat compared with the strike price. This is not empirically true. When running Black-Scholes in reverse, computing the implicit volatility from observed market rates for options (and using the other observable parameters), equities tend to have skewed curves: compared to at-the-money, implied volatility is substantially higher for low strikes, and slightly lower for high strikes. Commodities often have the reverse behaviour to equities, with higher implied volatility for higher strikes. This departure from linearity, when graphed, is termed the volatility smile.Naturally it is possible – at the expense of additional complexity – to factor in these non-linearities. And so we come to Derman’s and Miller’s book, “The Volatility Smile”. Aimed at practitioners who have already absorbed the standard Black-Scholes approach, this treatment looks in detail at several advanced models (local volatility, stochastic diffusion, jump-diffusion) which aim to provide a better match to real-life behaviour.Presenting itself as a mathematical textbook, albeit informed and motivated by market realities, the precondition for getting the best from this work is plainly a postgraduate qualification in mathematical finance. The book is really for working quants. Those with the right background will, however, find the presentation both relevant and lucid.
K**D
Five Stars
Well written even for those with basic understanding of options math..
Q**T
Amazing vol book. Way better than other VOl books
The best book on vol modeling I have read
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