
The Determinants of the Time to Efficiency in Options Markets: A Survival Analysis Approach
Deville, Laurent; Riva, Fabrice (2004), The Determinants of the Time to Efficiency in Options Markets: A Survival Analysis Approach, Conférence internationale - Association française de finance (AFFI), 2004-12, Paris, France
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Communication / ConférenceDate
2004Conference title
Conférence internationale - Association française de finance (AFFI)Conference date
2004-12Conference city
ParisConference country
FranceMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract (EN)
This paper examines the determinants of the time it takes for an index options market to be brought back to efficiency after put-call parity deviations, using intraday transactions data from the French CAC 40 index options over the August 2000 - July 2001 period. We address this issue through survival analysis which allows us to characterize how differences in market conditions influence the expected time before the market reaches the no-arbitrage relationship. We find that moneyness, maturity, trading volume as well as trade imbalances in call and put options, and volatility are important in understanding why some arbitrage opportunities disappear faster than others. After controlling for differences in the trading environnement, we find evidence of a negative relationship between the existence of ETFs on the index and the time to efficiency.Subjects / Keywords
Survival analysis; Market efficiency; Survival analysis; exchange traded funds; Index optionsRelated items
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