TY - JOUR
T1 - Is there price discovery in equity options?
AU - Muravyev, Dmitriy
AU - Pearson, Neil D.
AU - Paul Broussard, John
N1 - Funding Information:
We gratefully thank Nanex and Eric Hunsader for providing the trade and quote data for the options and their underlying stocks, and we thank seminar participants at Texas A&M University, the University of Illinois, the University of Notre Dame, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong University, Chinese University of Hong Kong, and especially Greg Bauer, Joel Hasbrouck, Tim Johnson, Stewart Mayhew, Mathew Spiegel, and the referee Hendrick Bessembinder for helpful comments. Dmitriy Muravyev acknowledges financial support from the Irwin Fellowship at the University of Illinois.
PY - 2013/2
Y1 - 2013/2
N2 - We use tick-by-tick quote data for 39 liquid US stocks and options on them, and we focus on events when the two markets disagree about the stock price in the sense that the option-implied stock price obtained from the put-call parity relation is inconsistent with the actual stock price. Option market quotes adjust to eliminate the disagreement, while the stock market quotes behave normally, as if there were no disagreement. The disagreement events are typically precipitated by stock price movements and display signed option volume in the direction that tends to eliminate the disagreements. These results show that option price quotes do not contain economically significant information about future stock prices beyond what is already reflected in current stock prices, i.e., no economically significant price discovery occurs in the option market. We also find no option market price discovery using a much larger sample of disagreement events based on a weaker definition of a disagreement, which verifies that the findings for the primary sample are not due to unusual or unrepresentative market behavior during the put-call parity violations.
AB - We use tick-by-tick quote data for 39 liquid US stocks and options on them, and we focus on events when the two markets disagree about the stock price in the sense that the option-implied stock price obtained from the put-call parity relation is inconsistent with the actual stock price. Option market quotes adjust to eliminate the disagreement, while the stock market quotes behave normally, as if there were no disagreement. The disagreement events are typically precipitated by stock price movements and display signed option volume in the direction that tends to eliminate the disagreements. These results show that option price quotes do not contain economically significant information about future stock prices beyond what is already reflected in current stock prices, i.e., no economically significant price discovery occurs in the option market. We also find no option market price discovery using a much larger sample of disagreement events based on a weaker definition of a disagreement, which verifies that the findings for the primary sample are not due to unusual or unrepresentative market behavior during the put-call parity violations.
KW - Equity options
KW - Market microstructure
KW - Price discovery
KW - Put-call parity
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jfineco.2012.09.003
DO - 10.1016/j.jfineco.2012.09.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84873194235
SN - 0304-405X
VL - 107
SP - 259
EP - 283
JO - Journal of Financial Economics
JF - Journal of Financial Economics
IS - 2
ER -