

The Quest to Price Options
22 snips Dec 17, 2024
Dive into the fascinating history of options pricing, tracing its roots from early 1900s mathematics to the groundbreaking achievements of Black, Scholes, and Merton in the 1970s. Discover how this quest revolutionized modern finance and led to the establishment of the Chicago Board Options Exchange. The discussion spans the influence of early traders, the interplay of economic theories across cultures, and the profound impact of options theory on decision-making in various industries. Uncover how concepts of uncertainty shape our economic landscape today.
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Options: Calls, Puts, and Volatility
- Options give the right to buy (call) or sell (put) an asset at a specific price within a timeframe.
- Their value is tricky to determine, especially with future expiry, as volatility influences potential profit.
Bachelier's Overlooked Genius
- Louis Bachelier, a French mathematician, almost solved options pricing in 1900.
- His work, applying mathematics to finance, was initially overlooked by his advisor, Henri Poincaré.
Bachelier's Insight: Randomness and News
- Bachelier's dissertation reasoned that stock prices appear random and news, unpredictable by definition, drives price changes.
- He grasped Brownian motion, laying groundwork for later financial theories like Random Walk and Martingale.