Has Nassim Taleb Killed Black-Scholes?

Nassim Taleb and Espen Haug have

a paper out. Here’s the abstract:

Options traders use a pricing formula which they adapt by fudging and changing

the tails and skewness by varying one parameter, the standard deviation of

a Gaussian. Such formula is popularly called Black-Scholes-Merton owing to

an attributed eponymous discovery (though changing the standard deviation

parameter is in contradiction with it). However we have historical evidence

that 1) Black, Scholes and Merton did not invent any formula,

just found an argument to make a well known (and used) formula compatible

with the economics establishment, by removing the “risk” parameter

through dynamic hedging, 2) Option traders use (and evidently have used since

1902) the previous versions of the formula of Louis Bachelier and Edward O.

Thorp (that allow a broad choice of probability distributions) and removed

the risk parameter by using put-call parity. The Bachelier-Thorp approach

is more robust (among other things) to the high impact rare event. It

is time to stop calling the formula by the wrong name.

Over at BreakingViews (subscription required), Pablo Triana explains

what this means:

The Black-Scholes-Merton (BSM) option pricing model won two of its authors

a Nobel Prize in economics. But a potentially revolutionary paper by Nassim

Taleb and Espen Haug has thrown the whole edifice into question…

BSM may be reduced to what Taleb and Haug deem a “marketing exercise”.

All that BSM did is re-derive an already existing formula by using new and

quite fragile theoretical arguments.

Even more dramatic and watersheddy, Taleb and Haug argue that actual option

prices on the open market may be simply the result of the interaction of supply

and demand, with no formula involved. That goes against BSM, which says demand

forces should play no role in pricing…

Why is all this relevant? There are at least two crucial consequences. First,

the whole role of quantitative finance is thrown into question…

The second implication of Taleb and Haug is that implied volatility, a ubiquitous

element of the markets, ceases to make sense. In fact, it would cease to exist…

Rather than being the “market´s expected future turbulence”

or the “market´s fear gauge”, as conventional wisdom would

hold, implied volatility would have proven itself to be nothing but make-believe.

A nonexistent ghost.

Now I’m not remotely educated enough in such matters to critically assess the

Haug-Taleb paper, or its interpretation by Triana. But I am looking forward

to a spirited debate.

(Via Kedrosky)

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