July 27th, 2004, 11:22 am
Hi,Thank you very much for your replies. Numbersix, I have thought about your explanation on conditionnal probabilities (which you also explained in your article in wilmott) and came to the following questions :I have tried to solve the problem for a small number of spot and time step. So I take a simple binomial scheme (the recombining one), starting from So and going through time t1, t2 and t3. On time t1, I can go to Su and Sd, on time t2, Suu, Sud and Sdd, and on time t3, Suuu, Suud, Sudd, Sddd. From the vanilla option prices, I can access the following probabilities : So -> S...To price my barrier options, I need the other 9 conditionnal probabilities (from one point, the stock can only go up or down one step). Using the fact that from one point, the departure probabilities must add to one (after all, the stock has to go somewhere !), I have 5 equations. Moreover, using the conditionnal probabilities rule, I have 7 more equations (one for each point in time t2 and t3). So, I have 12 equations, 9 unknowns and no repetitive equation. I tried to solve it and could find a solution.Of course, if I suppose that from one point, the spot can go to every other point in the next time step (not only going up or down), then I haven't got enough equations to solve my problem. This is basically what you suppose in the article : the stock can jump from one state on time t to another one on time t+dt. But for a simple binomial tree, I have enough information. Don't you think that if we split the asset and time scale enough, we could go back to the binomial scheme ? It seems to me that you are basically including jumps in your underlying process (which is of course true because the underlying moves at least one tick by one) and that is the reason why the diffusion process do not yield the same solution.