Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Temporality in Life as Seen Through Literature: Contributions to Phenomenology of Life
Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka (eds.)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
Language and Literature; Phenomenology; Aesthetics; Philosophy of Man
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2007 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-1-4020-5330-6
ISBN electrónico
978-1-4020-5331-3
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2007
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer 2007
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
A Temporal Chora
Alira Ashvo-Munoz
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section I | Pp. 3-13
Literature and the Sense of the Past
Aria Omrani
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section I | Pp. 15-22
“A Moment in Timelessness”: Ben Okri’s (1995; 1999)
Rosemary Gray
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section I | Pp. 23-35
A Mode of Recollection in African Autobiography
Tony E. Afejuku
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section I | Pp. 37-46
“In an Instant of Time”: The Imagist Perception and the Phenomenology of the “Upsurge” of the Present in Ezra Pound’s Cantos
Ming-Qian Ma
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section I | Pp. 47-63
Ascent Patterns in the Early Poetry of Tennyson
William S. Smith
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section I | Pp. 65-81
Ontology and Epistemology of Time in the Stage Play: Revisiting Roman Ingarden’s and
Jadwiga S. Smith
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section II | Pp. 85-93
Temporal Sequence and Permanence in by Saint-John Perse
Victor Kocay
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section II | Pp. 95-114
Non-Teleological Temporality in Philosophy and Literature: Camus, Achebe, Emerson, Ellison, Hurston, and Nietzsche
Imafedia Okhamafe
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section II | Pp. 115-128
The Conflicting World-Views of the Traditional and the Modernist Novel
Piotr Mroz
In this chapter, we have developed a new, more flexible and powerful method to construct risk-neutral, arbitrage-free, semi-recombining implied binomial trees that are consistent with given market prices of liquid-traded options. The advantage of our method for constructing implied binomial trees is that no interpolation or extrapolation steps are necessary and no prior guess about the benchmark distribution is required. This is achieved by using a’ smoothness criterion’ to recover the implied risk-neutral probability distribution. Additionally, we have to solve a quadratic programming optimization problem with linear inequality constraints, which can be easily solved with standard software. Furthermore, our method uses all the available information on market prices to estimate the IRNPD, since the IRNPD of each maturity date incorporates the IRNPDs of all previous maturity dates. Under the additional assumption that a volatility function exists, the method can be used to construct arbitrage-free, risk-neutral, recombining implied multinomial trees. As a result, we are able to price and hedge many plain-vanilla and exotic options in accordance with given market prices.
Further research should examine the empirical performance of the method and compare it to existing approaches in a more extensive test. Here, it is of special interest which method performs better — constructing implied binomial trees or constructing implied multinomial trees. This is equivalent to the question of whether the assumption of equal path probabilities in each sub-tree or the assumption of the existence of a volatility function leads to better empirical results.
- Section II | Pp. 129-142