Sure, give me an example of a listed derivative that is "marked to fantasy"? Also, please tell me why aren't you arbing that mark with all of your tragic net worth?Quote from StarDust9182:
How about using mark-to-fantasy like some of the listed derivatives today?
So what? when I have to make a price on a quarter-yard of single stock collar, I don't go into philosophy, but rather look at it's realized volatility etc etc. In Black-Sholes world the stock is just an underlying asset, an abstraction in a risk-neutral world. It could be any other underlying, a CDS index, an interest-rate future or a bond futures, a commodity futures etc. The "deep thoughts" on the nature of the asset do not really enter into the option pricing.Quote from StarDust9182:
A stock's price can also be looked at as a kind of implied volatility limit as theta approaches zero.
Very well - if IV is the measure of percieved risk, what is the generic measure of risk?Quote from StarDust9182:
I like to think of IV as a measure of the market's perceived risk at any given point.
Look pretty good, especially considering the liquidity constraints in the option space.Quote from trilogic:
do options traders who delta hedge "on a regular basis" make better returns than those who use options as a tool just to buy and sell the "market" without regard to "if" the option are over / under valued ? What do good option traders returns look like relative to a regular long/short fund ?
Free? No, there are no free lunches, but there are cheap lunchesQuote from trilogic:
If one understand the model inefficiencies would there not be free money laying all around the markets ?


Quote from sle:
Sure, give me an example of a listed derivative that is "marked to fantasy"? Also, please tell me why aren't you arbing that mark with all of your tragic net worth?
So what? when I have to make a price on a quarter-yard of single stock collar, I don't go into philosophy, but rather look at it's realized volatility etc etc. In Black-Sholes world the stock is just an underlying asset, an abstraction in a risk-neutral world. It could be any other underlying, a CDS index, an interest-rate future or a bond futures, a commodity futures etc. The "deep thoughts" on the nature of the asset do not really enter into the option pricing.
Very well - if IV is the measure of percieved risk, what is the generic measure of risk?
Look pretty good, especially considering the liquidity constraints in the option space.
Free? No, there are no free lunches, but there are cheap lunches
PS. StarDust9182, trilogic et al - this is actually turning up some interesting points/thoughts, so let's continue![]()
Quote from oldnemesis:
Some people might benefit from reading the following:
http://www.volcube.com/resources/options-articles/delta-neutral-trading-strategies/
(I am not promoting volcube it's just a good explanation of Market Making and delta neutral strategies.)
Also:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_neutral
It might make help make sense of what sle says. I believe sle is a volatility trader and simply hedges the underlying.

Quote from StarDust9182:
"Sure, give me an example of a listed derivative that is "marked to fantasy"
SLE - as my example I present the london whale derivatives.
See: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/crimi...cing-hundreds-billions-cds-dimon-next-diamond
and see: http://socioecohistory.wordpress.com/2009/04/03/fasb-here-comes-mark-to-fantasy-accounting/
Sorry, I was under impression that we are talking about listed markets. However, even in the OTC markets, a mismarked book is mismarked - even the trader himself knew he's lying and was trying to hide it.Quote from StarDust9182:
as my example I present the london whale derivatives.
Definition of a true arb is a bit washy; let's take convertible arb as an example - while you can decompose the asset into vanilla corporate + option and lock in the mispricing, you might live through some MtM pains along the way. Yet it's a true arb in an official sense of that word, since you can trade every sub-component of the bond to lock in the value.Quote from StarDust9182:
Money can make mark to fantasy appear real for a long time. A true arb requires a fixed date where the mispricing must be expressed at a guaranteed profit. So what kind of "arb" are you talking about?
True, risk as a concept is not objective, that's the problem. However, option price once translated into the implied volatility is a pretty objective, quantifiable thing. From the market-makers (or any volatility trader perspective) it's the expectation of volatility for a given stock along some path. While imperfect, every volatility trader is fully aware of the models imperfections and knows how to correct for them.Quote from StarDust9182:
Sorry, I am not sure I understand what you are asking. Risk is not an objective thing. Risk is trader specific isn't it? Is this a philosophy question?
I appreciate the presense of intelligent people on this board, I really do (otherwise, I'd not post here). Hopefully we are arguing here in "pursuit of truth and happiness", not to prove to the world that we are right and other are wrong.Quote from StarDust9182:
BY the way, I trade my own capital not other people's so I express my opinion in the market and the market tells me my result. I am still here so some of my philosophy must be working.