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  2. Lehman Formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lehman_Formula

    It usually deals with amounts greater than one million dollars. Below this mark, brokerage services and investment banks usually offer a set of tiered fees, or set-rate trading prices (such as $9.95 per trade). The original version (called the Lehman Scale) was as follows: 5% of the first $1 million raised from investors

  3. Finite difference methods for option pricing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finite_difference_methods...

    The discrete difference equations may then be solved iteratively to calculate a price for the option. [4] The approach arises since the evolution of the option value can be modelled via a partial differential equation (PDE), as a function of (at least) time and price of underlying; see for example the Black–Scholes PDE. Once in this form, a ...

  4. Price discrimination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_discrimination

    Price discrimination (differential pricing, [1] [2] equity pricing, preferential pricing, [3] dual pricing, [4] tiered pricing, [5] and surveillance pricing [6]) is a microeconomic pricing strategy where identical or largely similar goods or services are sold at different prices by the same provider to different buyers based on which market segment they are perceived to be part of.

  5. Monte Carlo methods for option pricing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monte_Carlo_methods_for...

    Here the price of the option is its discounted expected value; see risk neutrality and rational pricing. The technique applied then, is (1) to generate a large number of possible, but random, price paths for the underlying (or underlyings) via simulation, and (2) to then calculate the associated exercise value (i.e. "payoff") of the option for ...

  6. Two-tiered pricing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-tiered_pricing

    Two-tiered pricing refers to a system under which commodities for domestic use are supported at one level and those for export markets at another, lower level.. In the United States, the peanut price support program, until policy changes made by the 2002 farm bill (P.L. 101-171, Section 1301-1310), used a two-tiered pricing system with a higher level of support for “quota peanuts” that ...

  7. Binomial options pricing model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binomial_options_pricing_model

    The binomial pricing model traces the evolution of the option's key underlying variables in discrete-time. This is done by means of a binomial lattice (Tree), for a number of time steps between the valuation and expiration dates. Each node in the lattice represents a possible price of the underlying at a given point in time.

  8. Littlewood's rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Littlewood's_rule

    Alternatively bid prices can be calculated via = ⁡ (>) Littlewood's model is limited to two classes. Peter Belobaba developed a model based on this rule called expected marginal seat revenue, abbreviated as EMSR, which is an -class model [3]

  9. Good–better–best - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good–better–best

    A common pitfall of good–better–best is cannibalization, where customers who could afford the "better" option instead opt for the "good" option to save money.. Marketers discourage customers from downgrading by implementing "fence attributes," such as by making "good" hotel rates non-refundable, or by making the least expensive concert tickets general admission, with no assig