To find the initial price V0 of the ratios option, we need to compute the expected discounted payoff under the risk-neutral measure Q. The payoff at time T1 is given by:
HT1=ST0ST1
The initial price is the expected present value of this payoff:
V0=EQ[e−rT1HT1]=e−rT1EQ[ST0ST1]
Under the risk-neutral measure, the stock price St follows the geometric Brownian motion:
dSt=rStdt+σStdWtQ
This implies that:
ST1=ST0e(r−21σ2)(T1−T0)+σ(WT1−WT0)
Therefore, the ratio ST0ST1 simplifies to:
ST0ST1=e(r−21σ2)(T1−T0)+σ(WT1−WT0)
Since WT1−WT0 is normally distributed with mean 0 and variance T1−T0, we can compute the expected value:
EQ[eσ(WT1−WT0)]=e21σ2(T1−T0)
Thus, the expected ratio becomes:
EQ[ST0ST1]=e(r−21σ2)(T1−T0)⋅e21σ2(T1−T0)=er(T1−T0)
Plugging back into V0:
V0=e−rT1⋅er(T1−T0)=e−rT0
Answer: An explicit expression: V₀ = e^( – r × T₀ )