Extracting Implied Forward and Implied Dividend Curves from the Options Market: Theory and Practice
Extracting Implied Forward and Implied Dividend Curves from the Options Market: Theory and Practice
1. Implied Forward for a Single Strike
Basic Principle: Put-Call Parity
For European options with the same expiration dateand the same strike price, the no-arbitrage condition requires:
Where:
-andare the prices of the call and put options, respectively.
-is the discount factor for maturity, e.g.,.
-is the theoretical forward price for maturity.
Implied Forward Formula
Solving the parity relationship yields the forward price implied by that strike:
Practical Handling Suggestions
Use mid-prices to reduce the impact of bid-ask spreads:
Signal Verification: Check ifis reasonable and exclude strikes with abnormal quotes.
2. Synthesizing Forward Price from Multiple Strikes: Weighted Averaging Method
Problem Context
Thevalues derived from different strike prices exhibit slight variations, primarily due to:
- Bid-ask spreads in option quotes
- Market microstructure noise
- Illiquidity of deep out-of-the-money options
Weighted Averaging Method
For multiple strikeswith the same expiration date:
Weight Design: Based on Spread Uncertainty
Method 1: Simple Sum of Spreads
where.
Method 2: Conservative Sum of Squares (Recommended)
Weight Allocation: Use inverse-variance weighting.
Smaller spreads (better liquidity) receive higher weights.
Strike Screening Criteria
- Liquidity Priority: Use only strikes near at-the-money (typically Delta in the 0.2-0.8 range).
- Outlier Removal:
- Strikes with bid prices of 0 or abnormally low.
- Spreads exceeding a specified threshold (e.g., 20% of the mid-price).
- Strikes that clearly violate no-arbitrage put-call parity.
- Data Validation: Check the sensitivity of the weightedto weight choices.
3. Constructing the Implied Dividend Curve
Theoretical Basis
The implied forward curveembeds the market's expectations for future dividends. Assuming the following are known:
- Current spot price
- Discount factorsfor each maturity
Method A: Cumulative Dividend Present Value Curve (Recommended)
Discrete Dividend Model Relationship:
whereis the present value of all dividends paid before time.
Inversion Formula:
Curve Construction Steps:
- For each expiration date, calculate.
- Check monotonicity:should be non-decreasing with.
- Use monotonic interpolation methods (e.g., piecewise linear or monotonic splines) to build the complete curve.
Advantage: Directly corresponds to actual dividend payments, facilitating alignment with seasonal dividend patterns.
Method B: Equivalent Continuous Dividend Yield
Continuous Model Relationship:
whereis the continuous dividend yield.
Calculation Formula:
whereis the average continuous interest rate for maturity.
Application Scenario: Suitable for pricing models requiring a continuous dividend yield (e.g., Black-Scholes).
4. Practical Operation Essentials
Data Preparation
- Option Data: Ensure synchronized call/put quotes are used.
- Interest Rate Curve: Construct an accurate zero-coupon curve or forward rate curve.
- Spot Price: Use the same underlying definition as at option expiration.
Quality Control
- Liquidity Filtering: Based on trading volume, open interest, and bid-ask spreads.
- Arbitrage Checks: Verify that put-call parity is not significantly violated.
- Curve Smoothing: Perform reasonableness checks on the generated forward and dividend curves.
Seasonal Handling
For the dividend curve:
- Identify known ex-dividend date patterns.
- Compare implied dividends with the company's announced dividend schedule.
- Consider differences between special and regular dividends.
Sources of Error
- Bid-Ask Spreads: The largest source of noise.
- Borrowing Costs: Stock loan rates not captured in standard models.
- Early Exercise: Impact of American-style options (significant for high-dividend stocks).
- Taxes and Transaction Costs: Frictions present in actual arbitrage.