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Installment Options and Static Hedging

MARK H.A. DAVIS (Professor in the Department of Mathematics at Imperial College in London, England.)
WALTER SCHACHERMAYER (University professor in the Financial and Actuarial Mathematics Group at Technische Universität Wien in Vienna, Austria.)
ROBERT G. TOMPKINS (University dozent in the Financial and Actuarial Mathematics Group at Technische Universität Wien in Vienna, Austria. rtompkins@ins.at)

Journal of Risk Finance

ISSN: 1526-5943

Article publication date: 1 January 2002

239

Abstract

This article discusses static hedges for installment options, which are finding broad application in cases where the option‐buyer may reduce up‐front premium costs via early termination of an option. An installment option is a European option in which the premium, instead of being paid up front, is paid in a series of installments. If all installments are paid, the holder receives the exercise value, but the holder has the right terminate payments on any payment date, in which case the option lapses with no further payments on either side. The authors summarize pricing and risk management concepts for these options, in particular, using static hedges to obtain both no‐arbitrage pricing bounds and very effective hedging strategies with almost no vega risk.

Citation

DAVIS, M.H.A., SCHACHERMAYER, W. and TOMPKINS, R.G. (2002), "Installment Options and Static Hedging", Journal of Risk Finance, Vol. 3 No. 2, pp. 46-52. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb043487

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2002, MCB UP Limited

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