
arXiv: 2002.00085
Principal component analysis (PCA) is a useful tool when trying to construct factor models from historical asset returns. For the implied volatilities of U.S. equities there is a PCA-based model with a principal eigenportfolio whose return time series lies close to that of an overarching market factor. The authors show that this market factor is the index resulting from the daily compounding of a weighted average of implied-volatility returns, with weights based on the options' open interest (OI) and Vega. The authors also analyze the singular vectors derived from the tensor structure of the implied volatilities of S&P500 constituents, and find evidence indicating that some type of OI and Vega-weighted index should be one of at least two significant factors in this market.
FOS: Economics and business, Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST), Quantitative Finance - Statistical Finance
FOS: Economics and business, Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST), Quantitative Finance - Statistical Finance
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