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AF
2015

Smile in motion: An intraday analysis of asymmetric implied volatility

9 years 10 months ago
Smile in motion: An intraday analysis of asymmetric implied volatility
We present a new method to measure the intraday relationship between movements of implied volatility smiles and stock returns. It is based on an enhanced smile regression model which captures patterns in the intraday data which have not yet been reported in the literature. Using transaction data for exchange-traded EuroStoxx 50 options from 2000 to 2011 and DAX options from 1995 to 2011, we show that, on average, about 99% of the intraday variation of implied volatility can be explained by moneyness and changes in the index level. Compared to the typical smile regression with moneyness alone, about 50% of the remaining errors can be attributed to movements in the underlying index. We find that the intraday evolution of volatility smiles is generally not consistent with traders’ rules of thumb such as the sticky strike or sticky delta rule. On average, the impact of index return on implied volatility is
Martin Wallmeier
Added 13 Apr 2016
Updated 13 Apr 2016
Type Journal
Year 2015
Where AF
Authors Martin Wallmeier
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