RichKid
PlanYourTrade > TradeYourPlan
- Joined
- 18 June 2004
- Posts
- 3,031
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- 5
Richkid, I don't use the ACH prices, so really don't know, but I would've thought they would get it right. A major unknown affecting option pricing is IV - so perhaps the ACH just use their IV for the week as stated in their "notices" section as opposed to calculating it each day as some data suppliers do. The link I just pasted into the post to crackaton for "General Notices" will take you to the "Margin Intervals, Market Maker Obligations, Volatility and Dividend Parameters and Interest Rates" PDF file and there is one for each week. Also, real time IV does fluctuate even throughout the course of the day especially if there are some fast moves of the underlying.RichKid said:[...] I'm trying to use the ACH prices as a guide to know when the options are overvalued since some of the free options calculators give values way beyond the market prices. Wayne and others have often mentioned how illiquid the local markets are and how expensive options can be here. My focus is on a more realistic guide, thought the ACH values would be a good reference, does someone know how accurate and fair their valuation model is??
Maybe the concept of an ACH fair value is different to the normal options fair value models we know of???
Any help would be appreciated.
sails said:Richkid, I don't use the ACH prices, so really don't know, but I would've thought they would get it right. -------
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I find Hoadley's calculator prices are very close to the live market provided I have all the correct imputs!
Hope this helps!
IV lets us know if the MM is "overcharging", and if so, we may have to use a different option strategy rather than just being long straight puts or calls. Unfortunately the MM's do dictate and are not very negotiableRichKid said:[...] Only issue with the Hoadley calculator is that if we keep changing inputs to match the market maker price then the mm would be dictating the outcome. If we want 'fair' value then it must be independant so that we can see if the mm is 'overcharging'. It becomes a chicken and egg situation otherwise. All depends on getting correct IV, HV etc and other inputs I guess and then waiting til the mm brings the spread down to match.[...]
Yes, I was surprised by it - thought I had somehow managed to delete some postsPS Funny how we were posting and editing threads at the same time, happened on another thread too, I try to do it asap, glad it didn't lead to too much confusion
money tree said:ACH prices are extremely accurate.
The ASX website using previous days close figures for their calcs. So for EOD, its good......otherwise completely useless.
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