There is much to be learned from examples such as yours, but it needs to be considered far more deeply and no one has thought through what I mean in this thread (probably my fault for not being clear).
From Peter Carr. This is what I mean:
From Peter Carr. This is what I mean:
Uncertain Volatility
Of the paths UUUU and UDUD, which path do you think is
more volatile?
⢠To a probabilist equating the word âvolatilityâ to quadratic
variation of returns, both paths have the same volatility.
⢠On the other hand, to a statistician who equates volatility to
the standard deviation of the terminal log price, the required
estimation of the mean implies that the reverting path UDUD
has more volatility than the trending path UUUU.
⢠On the other hand, to an ATM option writer who does not plan
to delta-hedge, the trending path UUUU has more volatility
than the reverting path UDUD. This writer equates the word
âvolatilityâ to the ATM implied to charge initially.
⢠On the other hand, to an ATM option writer who does plan
to delta-hedge, the reverting path UDUD has higher volatility
than the trending path UUUU. Again, equating the word
volatility to the initial ATM implied, this writer knows that
vega and gamma are more negative along the mean-reverting
path than the trending path. Forgetting the tree, these greeks
become relevant when one is uncertain about the magnitude
of squared returns and the possibility of crashes.
⢠Of course, an ATM option buyer disagrees with the seller on
which path is more volatile and an OTM call trader disagrees
again.
Quote from JJacksET4:
What I find interesting is that it seems like volatility can be low, but prices can move strongly over a period of time. Like I mentioned in an earlier thread, GS has moved from 155 range to 175 range so quietly few people noticed and I think IV and HV are real low.
It seems like there should be better way to measure change and not just volatility. For a quick example, if a stock did this in the last 7 trading days:
50
52
54
56
58
60
62
would you want to sell a 65 call for a low price just because the price isn't volatile?
I'm not sure if I'm explaining this correctly, but there is more to price movement then volatility.
Actually, Bernie Schaffer has an example like this in his book. Something like a strong uptrending stock was at $55 and a stock that went up and down quickly and was at $55 and that stock had way more premium, so it was fairly cheap to buy 55 strike calls on the stocks that was a strong uptrender. Interesting to think about anyway.
JJacksET4