Maximum Implied Variance Slope -- Practical Aspects
Pricing of Securities
2023-04-27 v1
Abstract
In the Black-Scholes model, the absence of arbitrages imposes necessary constraints on the slope of the implied variance in terms of log-moneyness, asymptotically for large log-moneyness. The constraints are used for example in the SVI implied volatility parameterization to ensure the resulting smile has no arbitrages. This note shows that those no-arbitrage contraints are very mild, and that arbitrage is almost always guaranteed in a large range of slopes where the contraints are enforced.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2304.13610,
title = {Maximum Implied Variance Slope -- Practical Aspects},
author = {Fabien Le Floc'h and Winfried Koller},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2304.13610},
year = {2023}
}