Affiliation:
1. Department of Finance Spears School of Business, Oklahoma State University Stillwater Oklahoma USA
Abstract
AbstractThis article examines the effects that pricing errors in the underlying asset have on options prices and their Greeks. Pricing errors can be viewed as random proportional transaction costs. When pricing errors are information‐unrelated, options prices are unambiguously higher than the Black‐Scholes case and increasing in the pricing error variance. Hedging volatility is higher and the optimal exercise price for American put options is decreased. The option implied risk‐neutral density and option Greeks are materially affected, which leads to suboptimal risk management and hedging when pricing errors are not accounted for. Simulation and data evidence validate the theoretical results.