Abstract:
The makeup of the US Senate is decided by electoral ballots each
two years. The Senate consists of 100 seats being two representatives per
state elected by popular ballot. The Iowa Electronic Markets (IEM)
houses various financial contracts based on election outcomes with
payoffs based on US Presidential and Congressional election outcomes.
This article provides a model for establishing the fair value of observed
contracts written on the US Senate elections. The state variables are
opinion poll data on voting intentions of the public sampled in the states
which have candidates due for reelection in the 2010 midterm elections.
We develop a stochastic model for voting intentions and apply techniques
honed in financial derivative pricing for establishing the theoretical fair
value of a contract We compare the actual traded contract prices with the
fair valuation yielded by our model. This paper calibrates the model,
quantifies the degree of consistency and explains why there may be
deviations. The model becomes valuable for a party to develop election
strategies to allocate campaign resources in order to optimize their
likelihood of gaining control of the Senate.
Description:
CURRENT POLITICS AND ECONOMICS OF THE UNITED STATES, CANADA, AND MEXICO; Volume 15, Number 4, 2013