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Options are also options on options: how to smile with Black-Scholes

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  • Claude Martini
  • Arianna Mingone

Abstract

We observe that a European Call option with strike $L > K$ can be seen as a Call option with strike $L-K$ on a Call option with strike $K$. Under no arbitrage assumptions, this yields immediately that the prices of the two contracts are the same, in full generality. We study in detail the relative pricing function which gives the price of the Call on Call option as a function of its underlying Call option, and provide quasi-closed formula for those new pricing functions in the Carr-Pelts-Tehranchi family [Carr and Pelts, Duality, Deltas, and Derivatives Pricing, 2015] and [Tehranchi, A Black-Scholes inequality: applications and generalisations, Finance Stoch, 2020] that includes the Black-Scholes model as a particular case. We also study the properties of the function that maps the price normalized by the underlier, viewed as a function of the moneyness, to the normalized relative price, which allows us to produce several new closed formulas. In connection to the symmetry transformation of a smile, we build a lift of the relative pricing function in the case of an underlier that does not vanish. We finally provide some properties of the implied volatility smiles of Calls on Calls and lifted Calls on Calls in the Black-Scholes model.

Suggested Citation

  • Claude Martini & Arianna Mingone, 2023. "Options are also options on options: how to smile with Black-Scholes," Papers 2308.04130, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2308.04130
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Merton, Robert C, 1974. "On the Pricing of Corporate Debt: The Risk Structure of Interest Rates," Journal of Finance, American Finance Association, vol. 29(2), pages 449-470, May.
    2. Arianna Mingone, 2022. "Smiles in delta," Papers 2209.00406, arXiv.org.
    3. Claude Martini & Arianna Mingone, 2021. "Explicit no arbitrage domain for sub-SVIs via reparametrization," Papers 2106.02418, arXiv.org.
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