期刊名称:Birkbeck Working Papers in Economics and Finance / School of Economics, Mathematics and Statistics, Birkbeck College
印刷版ISSN:1745-8587
出版年度:2007
卷号:2007
出版社:London University
摘要:In the recent years, banks have sold structured products such as Worst-of
options, Everest and Himalayas, resulting in a short correlation exposure. They
have hence become interested in offsetting part of this exposure, namely buying
back correlation. Two ways have been proposed for such a strategy: either pure
correlation swaps or dispersion trades, taking position in an index option and
the opposite position in the components options. These dispersion trades have
been traded using calls, puts, straddles, and they now trade variance swaps as
well as third generation volatility products, namely gamma swaps and barrier
variance swaps. When considering a dispersion trade via variance swaps, one
immediately sees that it gives a correlation exposure. But it has empirically
been showed that the implied correlation - in such a dispersion trade - was not
equal to the strike of a correlation swap with the same maturity. Indeed, the
implied correlation tends to be around 10 points higher. The purpose of this
paper is to theoretically explain such a spread. In fact, we prove that the
P&L of a dispersion trade is equal to the sum of the spread between implied
and realised correlation - multiplied by an average variance of the components -
and a volatility part. Furthermore, this volatility part is of second order,
and, more precisely, is of Volga order. Thus the observed correlation spread can
be totally explained by the Volga of the dispersion trade. This result is to be
reviewed when considering different weighting schemes for the dispersion trade.