Abstract

In financial mathematics, the pricing technique for derivatives is constantly debated. In this paper, the pricing technique of the European Option is mainly discussed, and the binomial tree (BN) model is first applied to the pricing process of European options. The previous results show that carbon credit index can be traded as an option, and BN model can correctly simulate the future price of call option constructed by consuming the carbon credit index. Secondly, the Black-Scholes (BN) model is also a crucial technique for pricing European options, and it is successfully applied to predicting the future three months' CSI 300 index option price. Finally, BN model is compared with BS model, and the result reflects that BN model can perform as well as BS model for pricing European Option When the step reaches 2000. However, the efficiency of the BN model is stable under low volatility. Under higher volatility, such as 1.5 sigmas, the required steps will increase to achieve the same accuracy level. For American options, the BN simulator of a put option is close to the actual value, but the call option simulator will fluctuate. For the stock-pricing process, both models estimate far above Monte-Carlo method. The result of this paper is to provide some clues for pricing European options with different methods.

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