The Physics of Wall Street: a brief History of Predicting the Unpredictable
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• 21 the strike price. If a share of Google is trading at $100, and I have a contract that entitles me to buy a share of Google for $50, that option is worth at least $50 to me, since I can buy the share of Google at the discounted rate and then immediately sell it at a profit. conversely, if the option gives me the right to buy a share at $150, the option isn’t going to do me much good — unless, of course, Google’s stock price shoots up to above $150. But figuring out the precise relationship was a mystery. What should the right to do something in the future be worth now? Bachelier’s answer was built on the idea of a fair bet. A bet is consid- ered fair, in probability theory, if the average outcome for both people involved in the bet is zero. this means that, on average, over many re- peated bets, both players should break even. An unfair bet, meanwhile, is when one player is expected to lose money in the long run. Bachelier argued that an option is itself a kind of bet. the person selling the op- tion is betting that between the time the option is sold and the time it expires, the price of the underlying security will fall beneath the strike price. If that happens, the seller wins the bet — that is, makes a profit on the option. the option buyer, meanwhile, is betting that at some point the price of the underlying security will exceed the strike price, in which case the buyer makes a profit, by exercising the option and immediately selling the underlying security. So how much should an option cost? Bachelier reasoned that a fair price for an option would be the price that would make it a fair bet. In general, to figure out whether a bet is fair, you need to know the probability of every given outcome, and you need to know how much you would gain (or lose) if that outcome occurred. How much you gain or lose is easy to work out, since it’s just the difference between the strike price on the option and the market price for the underly- ing security. But with the random walk model in hand, Bachelier also knew how to calculate the probabilities that a given stock would ex- ceed (or fail to exceed) the strike price in a given time window. Putting these two elements together, Bachelier showed just how to calculate the fair price of an option. Problem solved. there’s an important point to emphasize here. one often hears that markets are unpredictable because they are random. there is a sense in which this is right, and Bachelier knew it. Bachelier’s ran- dom walk model indicates that you can’t predict whether a given stock is going to go up or down, or whether your portfolio will profit. But there’s another sense in which some features of markets are predictable precisely because they are random. It’s because markets are random that you can use Bachelier’s model to make probabilistic predictions, which, because of the law of large numbers — the mathematical result that Bernoulli discovered, linking probabilities with frequency — give you information about how markets will behave in the long run. this kind of prediction is useless for someone speculating on markets di- rectly, because it doesn’t let the speculator pick which stocks will be the winners and which the losers. But that doesn’t mean that statisti- cal predictions can’t help investors — just consider Bachelier’s options pricing model, where the assumption that markets for the underlying assets are random is the key to its effectiveness. that said, even a formula for pricing options isn’t a guaranteed trip to the bank. You still need a way to use the information that the for- mula provides to guide investment decisions and gain an edge on the market. Bachelier offered no clear insight into how to incorporate his options pricing model in a trading strategy. this was one reason why Bachelier’s options pricing model got less attention than his random walk model, even after his thesis was rediscovered by economists. A second reason was that options remained relatively exotic for a long time after he wrote his dissertation, so that even when economists in the fifties and sixties became interested in the random walk model, the options pricing model seemed quaint and irrelevant. In the United States, for instance, most options trading was illegal for much of the twentieth century. this would change in the late 1960s and again in the early 1970s. In the hands of others, Bachelier-style options pricing schemes would lay the foundations of fortunes. Bachelier survived World War I. He was released from the military on the last day of 1918. on his return to Paris, he discovered that his position at the University of Paris had been eliminated. But overall, things were better for Bachelier after the war. Many promising young mathematicians had perished in battle, opening up university posi- 22 • t h e p h y s i c s o f wa l l s t r e e t |
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