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Autore principale: Visagie, Jaco
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.11164
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author Visagie, Jaco
author_facet Visagie, Jaco
contents Recorded option pricing datasets are not always freely available. Additionally, these datasets often contain numerous prices which are either higher or lower than can reasonably be expected. Various reasons for these unexpected observations are possible, including human error in the recording of the details associated with the option in question. In order for the analyses performed on these datasets to be reliable, it is necessary to identify and remove these options from the dataset. In this paper, we list three distinct problems often found in recorded option price datasets alongside means of addressing these. The methods used are justified using sound statistical reasoning and remove option prices violating the standard assumption of no arbitrage. An attractive aspect of the proposed technique is that no option pricing model-based assumptions are used. Although the discussion is restricted to European options, the procedure is easily modified for use with exotic options as well. As a final contribution, the paper contains a link to six option pricing datasets which have already been cleaned using the proposed methods and can be freely used by researchers.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_11164
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A statistical technique for cleaning option price data
Visagie, Jaco
Computational Finance
Recorded option pricing datasets are not always freely available. Additionally, these datasets often contain numerous prices which are either higher or lower than can reasonably be expected. Various reasons for these unexpected observations are possible, including human error in the recording of the details associated with the option in question. In order for the analyses performed on these datasets to be reliable, it is necessary to identify and remove these options from the dataset. In this paper, we list three distinct problems often found in recorded option price datasets alongside means of addressing these. The methods used are justified using sound statistical reasoning and remove option prices violating the standard assumption of no arbitrage. An attractive aspect of the proposed technique is that no option pricing model-based assumptions are used. Although the discussion is restricted to European options, the procedure is easily modified for use with exotic options as well. As a final contribution, the paper contains a link to six option pricing datasets which have already been cleaned using the proposed methods and can be freely used by researchers.
title A statistical technique for cleaning option price data
topic Computational Finance
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.11164