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  1. M

    Implied Distribution from Skew

    It's useless to say that it needs to be rescaled to get the sum of probabilities equal to unity. Masteratwork
  2. M

    The problem with short gamma

    +1, there would be no need of options :p .
  3. M

    Implied Distribution from Skew

    True . As a practical way to do it, you can estimate implied distribution with at least 3 calls with closed strikes. Assume 3 calls C1 C2 C3 with strikes K1=K2-d and K3=K2+d, with interest rate r, and T the maturity. C1(K2-d) C2(K2) C3(K2+d) Implied distribution at K2 is...
  4. M

    The problem with short gamma

    My bad, I thought you wrote "I am pretty sure that I have a decent options system if I didn't have to worry about delta neutrality, but that is not my reality since I don't have access to variance or vola swaps." So where is your problem ? Delta neutrality ? Masteratwork
  5. M

    The problem with short gamma

    Hi nitro, As a trader who used to price variance swaps, I don't get it. Since you quote a variance swap, you need a lot of vanilla strikes to construct a portofolio that would replicate the variance payoff. You need to delta hedge your vanilla portofolio to keep a pure volatility...
  6. M

    Butterfly ITM, ATM, OTM?

    Are you sure about that ?
  7. M

    Unusual kurtosis

    Risk neutral distribution is the probability distribution that makes the expected future price be (today) forward price. Because the trend of an underlying doesn't make sense as one prices a derivative (because pricing models are based on a delta hedge strategy), that way, the expected future...
  8. M

    Unusual kurtosis

    Hi nitro, Why are you comparing risk neutral distribution with real one ? Risk neutral distribution is just a tool to price derivatives. In no way it has to do with real distribution. In fact the real distribution can't be known. The only thing that is known is past prices hence a...
  9. M

    vol of vol

    Vol of vol is related to volatility. It just means that vol fluctuates. dvega/dvol is related to the sensitivity of a vega. There is no vega and no dvega/dvol for a S&P future for example, but prices volatility could be variable. If volatility is variable, then there is vol of vol.
  10. M

    forward vol

    Hi Martinghoul, I see your point, but the fact that there are autocorrelation and/or vol of vol doesn't change forward vol. Forward vol is correct just for the moment one derives it. It's a weak way to forecast future volatility but it has to hold since everybody prices volty by the...
  11. M

    forward vol

    'would be nice :)
  12. M

    forward vol

    HI Martinghoul What do you mean with "In the presence of vol of vol, the equation doesn't have to hold" ? The equation is based on the definition of the variance. I May miss something but I don't see where vol of vol is involved ?
  13. M

    forward vol

    Hi, you have a lower boundary for vol2 vol2=vol1*SQRT(T1/T2) There is no way Vol2 be lower that level. If it were, that would tells you that volatility between T1 and T2 gets negative. How would it be ? Masteratwork.
  14. M

    is there a Volatility Doctor in the house?

    Well, you don't price an option with IV, you quote an option with IV. In some models like BS, you price an option with HV. IV is always unknown. The only thing you could know is 'Black & Scholes pricing model implied volatility'. IV is model dependent. A SABR model would have a different IV for...
  15. M

    is there a Volatility Doctor in the house?

    I didn't write something about quoting options without pricing model. What I've written is that market doesn't know future. So, it doesn't know future volatility. Again, if I pay $1 to buy a put and a pricing model shows that fair value is $ 0.15, it doesn't mean that I expect higher future...
  16. M

    is there a Volatility Doctor in the house?

    Hi Mark, happy new year, Sorry, IV has nothing to do with future volatility ! How the market would know it ? IV is just what makes your pricing model match current quotes. Demand and supply for option make the price. And the price has nothing to do with IV. A pricing model does. That why...
  17. M

    Volatility Trade - months and strikes

    Both could be at the money !
  18. M

    How do you avoid time decay problem in option even you are right in the direction?

    OP, You'd have a positive time decay if you trade a spread. The only thing you 'd have to check, is that the option sold is near at the money. Assume the spot is around 100. A call spread 80/100 (you buy the strike 80 and sell the strike 100) has a positive time decay. A put spread 120/100...
  19. M

    Why historical vola for short periods is almost worthless

    Back of the envelope calculation seems to valid your numbers. What matters with those datas ?
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