TY - JOUR T1 - Model Uncertainty and Pricing Performance in Option Valuation JF - The Journal of Derivatives DO - 10.3905/jod.2019.1.086 SP - jod.2019.1.086 AU - Dennis Bams AU - Gildas Blanchard AU - Thorsten Lehnert Y1 - 2019/10/03 UR - https://pm-research.com/content/early/2019/10/03/jod.2019.1.086.abstract N2 - The objective of this article is to evaluate the performance of the option pricing model at the cross-sectional level. For that purpose, the authors propose a statistical framework, in which they in particular account for the uncertainty associated with the reported pricing performance. Instead of a single figure, the authors determine an entire probability distribution function for the loss function that is used to measure the performance of the option pricing model. This method enables them to visualize the effect of parameter uncertainty on the reported pricing performance.Using a data-driven approach, the authors confirm previous evidence that standard volatility models with clustering and leverage effects are sufficient for the option pricing purpose. In addition, they demonstrate that there is short-term persistence but long-term heterogeneity in cross-sectional option pricing information. This finding has two important implications. First, it justifies the practitioner’s routine to refrain from time series approaches and instead estimate option pricing models on a cross section by cross section basis. Second, the long-term heterogeneity in option prices pinpoints the importance of measuring, comparing, and testing the option pricing model for each cross section separately.To the authors’ knowledge no statistical testing framework has previously been applied to a single cross section of option prices. They propose a method that addresses that need. The proposed framework can be applied to a broad set of models and data. In the empirical part of the paper, they show by means of example, an application that uses a discrete time volatility model on S&P 500 index options.TOPICS: Options, volatility measuresKey Findings• Absolute pricing performance, measured by a loss-function, is an inappropriate criteria to benchmark competing option pricing models at the cross-sectional level.• The long-term heterogeneity in cross-sectional option pricing information and the uncertainty of reported pricing performance calls for the necessity to rely on an entire probability distribution function of the loss function when comparing models performance.• This paper proposes a statistical framework, based on a data-driven approach, to compared model performance accounting for model uncertainty applicable to a single cross-section of option. ER -