Option-Implied Zero-Coupon Yields: Unifying Bond and Equity Markets
By: Ting-Jung Lee , W. Brent Lindquist , Svetlozar T. Rachev and more
Potential Business Impact:
Finds hidden money clues in stock market.
This paper addresses a critical inconsistency in models of the term structure of interest rates (TSIR), where zero-coupon bonds are priced under risk-neutral measures distinct from those used in equity markets. We propose a unified TSIR framework that treats zero-coupon bonds as European options with deterministic payoffs ensuring that they are priced under the same risk-neutral measure that governs equity derivatives. Using put-call parity, we extract zero-coupon bond implied yield curves from S&P 500 index options and compare them with the US daily treasury par yield curves. As the implied yield curves contain maturity time T and strike price K as independent variables, we investigate the K-dependence of the implied yield curve. Our findings, that at-the-money, option-implied yield curves provide the closest match to treasury par yield curves, support the view that the equity options market contains information that is highly relevant for the TSIR. By insisting that the risk-neutral measure used for bond valuation is the same as that revealed by equity derivatives, we offer a new organizing principle for future TSIR research.
Similar Papers
A Unifying Approach for the Pricing of Debt Securities
Pricing of Securities
Helps banks guess bond prices better.
Dynamic Asset Pricing in a Unified Bachelier-Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Mathematical Finance
Helps predict stock prices when money can be lost.
Pricing under the Benchmark Approach
Mathematical Finance
Makes stock option prices fairer and cheaper.