PyFENG provides an implementation of the standard financial engineering models for derivative pricing.
- Black-Scholes-Merton (BSM) and displaced BSM models:
- Analytic option price, Greeks, and implied volatility.
- Bachelier (Normal) model
- Analytic option price, Greeks, and implied volatility.
- Constant-elasticity-of-variance (CEV) model
- Analytic option price, Greeks, and implied volatility.
- Stochastic-alpha-beta-rho (SABR) model
- Hagan's BSM vol approximation.
- Choi & Wu's CEV vol approximation.
- Analytic integral for the normal SABR.
- Closed-form MC simulation for the normal SABR.
- Hyperbolic normal stochastic volatility (NSVh) model
- Analytic option pricing.
- Heston model
- FFT option pricing.
- Almost exact MC simulation by Glasserman & Kim and Choi & Kwok.
- Schobel-Zhu (OUSV) model
- FFT option pricing.
- Almost exact MC simulation by Choi
- Uses
numpy
arrays as basic datatype so computations are naturally vectorized. - Purely Python without C/C++ extensisons.
- Implemented with Python class.
- Intended for academic use. By providing reference models, it saves researchers' time. See PyFENG for Papers in Related Projects below.
pip install pyfeng
For upgrade,
pip install pyfeng --upgrade
In [1]:
import numpy as np
import pyfeng as pf
m = pf.Bsm(sigma=0.2, intr=0.05, divr=0.1)
m.price(strike=np.arange(80, 121, 10), spot=100, texp=1.2)
Out [1]:
array([15.71361973, 9.69250803, 5.52948546, 2.94558338, 1.48139131])
In [2]:
sigma = np.array([[0.2], [0.5]])
m = pf.Bsm(sigma, intr=0.05, divr=0.1) # sigma in axis=0
m.price(strike=[90, 95, 100], spot=100, texp=1.2, cp=[-1,1,1])
Out [2]:
array([[ 5.75927238, 7.38869609, 5.52948546],
[16.812035 , 18.83878533, 17.10541288]])
- Prof. Jaehyuk Choi (Peking University HSBC Business School). Email: [email protected]
- Commercial versions (implemented and optimized in C/C++) for some models are available. Email the author at [email protected].
- PyFENG for Papers is a collection of Jupyter notebooks that reproduce the results of financial engineering research papers using PyFENG.
- FER: Financial Engineering in R developed by the same author.
Not all models in
PyFENG
are implemented inFER
.FER
is a subset ofPyFENG
.