The Bachelier model is a model of an asset price under
brownian motion presented by
Louis Bachelier on his PhD thesis ''The Theory of Speculation'' (''Théorie de la spéculation'', published 1900). It is also called "Normal Model" equivalently (as opposed to "Log-Normal Model" or "Black-Scholes Model").
On April 8 2020, the
CME Group
CME Group Inc. (Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Chicago Board of Trade, New York Mercantile Exchange, The Commodity Exchange) is an American global markets company. It is the world's largest financial derivatives exchange, and trades in asset class ...
posted the note ''CME Clearing Plan to Address the Potential of a Negative Underlying in Certain Energy Options Contracts'', saying that after a threshold on price, it would change its standard energy options model from one based on
Geometric Brownian Motion and the
Black–Scholes model to the Bachelier model. On April 20 2020, oil futures reached
negative values for the first time in history, where Bachelier model took an important role in option pricing and risk management.
The European analytic formula for this model based on a risk neutral argument is derived in ''Analytic Formula for the European Normal Black Scholes Formula'' (''Kazuhiro Iwasawa'',
New York University, December 2nd, 2001).
The
implied volatility under the Bachelier model can be obtained by an accurate numerical approximation.
For an extensive review of the Bachelier model, see the review paper, ''A Black-Scholes User's Guide to the Bachelier Model'' , which summarizes the results on volatility conversion, risk management, stochastic volatility, and barrier options pricing to facilitate the model transition. The paper also connects the Black-Scholes and Bachelier models by using the displaced Black-Scholes model as a model family.
References
{{Derivatives market
Energy economics
Finance theories
Financial models
Options (finance)