This book studies the actual financial phenomena underlying the evaluation of financial derivatives, which is today virtually identified with and even replaced by the study of the mathematical aspects of stochastic calculus as a model for such phenomena. It adopts the view that the study of financial phenomena is on the brink of a revolution similar to that of quantum physics in the 1920s. History has shown that virtually all the major revolutions in physics were made through recognizing the presence of an inherent symmetry in underlying phenomena.
In this volume, a fundamental symmetry in a foreign exchange market that associates financially equivalent options on opposite sides of the market is introduced. This symmetry holds in a general foreign exchange market environment. In particular, it requires no assumptions to be made on the nature of a probability distribution for exchange rates — not even on the existence of such a distribution. The practical applications of the symmetry are significant and far reaching. They range from the detection of a new type of true arbitrage and a screen for consistency of option pricing models, to the reduction of the cost of software development. The symmetry introduced is not restricted to foreign exchange markets but is also valid for any financial markets.
Contents:
- Financial Matters:
- Market Environment
- Symmetry in a Foreign Exchange Market
- Further Symmetries
- Options with Consistently Smoothed Payoffs
- Applications
- Mathematical Matters:
- Validity of the Symmetry Relationships for European Options
- Validity of the Symmetry Relationships for Bermudan and American Options
- Validity of the Symmetry Relationships for Barrier Options
- Validity of the Symmetry Relationships for Options with Consistently Smoothed Payoffs
Readership: Finance practitioners, researchers, mathematicians and physicists.
Valery A Kholodnyi received his PhD in Applied Mathematics from the Moscow Institute of Electronics and Mathematics in 1990. He has held university positions in various departments, such as the Department of Microwave and Quantum Electronics, the Department of Mathematical Modeling of Physical Systems, and the Department of Physics, in both Russia and the United States. He has authored or co-authored over 60 research papers in finance, mathematics, theoretical physics and engineering, and has published in journals such as the Journal of Mathematical Physics and the Journal of Integral Equations and Applications. He was an Invited Speaker at the Second World Congress of Nonlinear Analysts and at numerous international and national conferences, as well as at research seminars in university departments and industry. Currently, he is the Vice-President of Research and Development for Integrated Energy Services L.C., an independent research institute for financial capital markets.
John F Price received his PhD in Mathematics from the Australian National University in 1970 and has since held university positions in many countries, including Australia, Cambodia, Canada, England, Italy, Switzerland and the United States. He has published over 60 papers in mathematics, physics and finance in journals such as Advances in Mathematics, the Journal of Functional Analysis and Notices of the American Mathematical Society. He has also written articles for financial practitioners in Risk, Export Today and Derivatives Strategy, and has designed and implemented risk management software for major corporations.