I'm putting together a black-scholes-merton option model for a private technology company. i'm trying to get to a good volatility number. does anyone have any suggestions?
as i look at the public comps, i get a volatility based on three years history or 63%. frank fabozzi in the handbook of fixed income securities that when pricing convertible debt, the volatility should be capped at 60% due to mean reversion. so, based on that, 60% seems to be a ceiling.
however, someone mentioned to me that if i'm looking at an option with a five-year life, i should use five years of history to calculate volatility. is this right? the volatility seems to me to be the bigest "art v. science" number out there, and if you don't believe the past doesn't represent the future, you could use a shorter time fram (especially since a five-year history puts you into the tech bust).
any thoughts would be appreciated.
as i look at the public comps, i get a volatility based on three years history or 63%. frank fabozzi in the handbook of fixed income securities that when pricing convertible debt, the volatility should be capped at 60% due to mean reversion. so, based on that, 60% seems to be a ceiling.
however, someone mentioned to me that if i'm looking at an option with a five-year life, i should use five years of history to calculate volatility. is this right? the volatility seems to me to be the bigest "art v. science" number out there, and if you don't believe the past doesn't represent the future, you could use a shorter time fram (especially since a five-year history puts you into the tech bust).
any thoughts would be appreciated.