Hey All, This is my first post on these boards, so here's a quick little blurb about me and then i'll dive into my question. I majored in Applied Mathematics (years ago) worked as a developer for the past 7years and then just recently got a job with an investment company. Since starting i've been trying to absorb as much as possible both on the jobs and through a pretty extensive collections of books that I've purchased over the course of the last 2 months. Pretty much every book i've purchased (Shreve, Neftci, Hull, etc.) has heavily covers derivatives pricing and i'm wondering exactly how this information is used.
Once a price for say an option is derived from either a Black-Scholes model or a Binomial Model how does this information factor into an investment decision? Is this information being used by everyday investors and in what way? Do these models spit out a fair price for a derivative and then investors use this information to find derivatives that are mispriced? Also does everyone who uses these models arrive at the same price based on similar parameters or is there some subjective component to these models that allows people using say the Binomial to arrive at completely different outcomes for the same asset?
Overall, i'm just beginning to wrap my head around these concepts but am having difficulties seeing the entire process of how the information in these derivatives pricing models are used. If anything in my question doesn't make sense, just let me know and i'll clarify, this is all really new to me.
Thanks,
Once a price for say an option is derived from either a Black-Scholes model or a Binomial Model how does this information factor into an investment decision? Is this information being used by everyday investors and in what way? Do these models spit out a fair price for a derivative and then investors use this information to find derivatives that are mispriced? Also does everyone who uses these models arrive at the same price based on similar parameters or is there some subjective component to these models that allows people using say the Binomial to arrive at completely different outcomes for the same asset?
Overall, i'm just beginning to wrap my head around these concepts but am having difficulties seeing the entire process of how the information in these derivatives pricing models are used. If anything in my question doesn't make sense, just let me know and i'll clarify, this is all really new to me.
Thanks,