Looking through the mail archives I can’t
find an mention of anyone
having issues with DividendVanillaOption.
Does anyone know if it works?
I’m generating an implied volatility
OK using VanillaOption but when
I have a Dividend schedule I’m
getting “not enough points to interpolate”.
I pass the Dates and Dividend amounts in
as two vectors of <Date> and
<Real>, as per the documentation.
-Ferghil
From: forourke
[mailto:[hidden email]]
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006
12:07 PM
To:
'[hidden email]'
Subject: Problem with
impliedVolatility using DividendEngine
Hi,
I’m new to QuantLib and am having a problem generating
an implied volatility
for an Option when dividends are involved using
DividendVanillaOption and
FDDividendAmericanEngine. If there are no dividends on the
underlier I have
no problem generating a volatility using VanillaOption and
FDAmericanEngine.
The following code gives a “not enough points to
interpolate” error:
DividendVanillaOption option(stochasticProcess,
payoff,
amExercise,
dividendDates, dividendPayments);
Size timeSteps = 101;
// Finite
differences engine
option.setPricingEngine(boost::shared_ptr<PricingEngine>(
new
FDDividendAmericanEngine(timeSteps,timeSteps)));
// Sample
volatility given this FDDividendAmericanEngine..
Volatility v = option.impliedVolatility(optionPrice,
1.0e-4, 20, QL_MIN_VOLATILITY,
QL_MAX_VOLATILITY);
Being a newbie, I lifted this pretty much from the
AmericanOption sample but changed
to use the dividend classes. I populate dividendDates and
dividendPayments with Dates
and Amounts for each dividend payment. I’ve also tried
changing the timeSteps
parameter to be odd/even and no change – I always get
the “not enough points to
interpolate” error.
Like I say, code similar to above using VanillaOption and
FDAmericanEngine gives
me a reasonable looking volatility figure. Am I going about
generating implied
volatility in the right way? Any help pointers greatly
appreciated.
Thanks,
Ferghil O’Rourke
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