Solutions FINAL EXAM 2002 SPRING Sridhar Seshadri B

Similar documents
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS

Notes: This is a closed book and closed notes exam. The maximal score on this exam is 100 points. Time: 75 minutes

Notes: This is a closed book and closed notes exam. The maximal score on this exam is 100 points. Time: 75 minutes

FIN 451 Exam Answers, November 8, 2007

1b. Write down the possible payoffs of each of the following instruments separately, and of the portfolio of all three:

Corporate Finance, Module 21: Option Valuation. Practice Problems. (The attached PDF file has better formatting.) Updated: July 7, 2005

Cash Flows on Options strike or exercise price

Martingale Pricing Theory in Discrete-Time and Discrete-Space Models

Derivative Securities Fall 2012 Final Exam Guidance Extended version includes full semester

Exotic Options. Chapter 19. Types of Exotics. Packages. Non-Standard American Options. Forward Start Options

ACT370H1S - TEST 2 - MARCH 25, 2009

Notes: This is a closed book and closed notes exam. The maximal score on this exam is 100 points. Time: 75 minutes

Appendix: Basics of Options and Option Pricing Option Payoffs

d St+ t u. With numbers e q = The price of the option in three months is

Binomial Trees. Liuren Wu. Options Markets. Zicklin School of Business, Baruch College. Liuren Wu (Baruch ) Binomial Trees Options Markets 1 / 22

MATH3075/3975 FINANCIAL MATHEMATICS TUTORIAL PROBLEMS

Institute of Actuaries of India. Subject. ST6 Finance and Investment B. For 2018 Examinationspecialist Technical B. Syllabus

ECON FINANCIAL ECONOMICS

Pricing theory of financial derivatives

Microeconomic Theory II Spring 2016 Final Exam Solutions

B.4 Solutions to Exam MFE/3F, Spring 2009

( 0) ,...,S N ,S 2 ( 0)... S N S 2. N and a portfolio is created that way, the value of the portfolio at time 0 is: (0) N S N ( 1, ) +...

Correlations and Structured Products: Basket Derivatives and Certificates

Dynamic Portfolio Choice II

Errata and updates for ASM Exam MFE/3F (Ninth Edition) sorted by page.

Mathematics of Finance Final Preparation December 19. To be thoroughly prepared for the final exam, you should

Options and Derivatives

Solutions to Midterm Exam. ECON Financial Economics Boston College, Department of Economics Spring Tuesday, March 19, 10:30-11:45am

Hull, Options, Futures & Other Derivatives Exotic Options

Stats243 Introduction to Mathematical Finance

Errata and updates for ASM Exam MFE (Tenth Edition) sorted by page.

ECON FINANCIAL ECONOMICS

INSTITUTE OF ACTUARIES OF INDIA

MASM006 UNIVERSITY OF EXETER SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING, COMPUTER SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES FINANCIAL MATHEMATICS.

1. 2 marks each True/False: briefly explain (no formal proofs/derivations are required for full mark).

Portfolio Management

Binomial Trees. Liuren Wu. Zicklin School of Business, Baruch College. Options Markets

P2.T5. Tuckman Chapter 7 The Science of Term Structure Models. Bionic Turtle FRM Video Tutorials. By: David Harper CFA, FRM, CIPM

Fixed-Income Analysis. Assignment 7

FNCE 302, Investments H Guy Williams, 2008

MATH4143: Scientific Computations for Finance Applications Final exam Time: 9:00 am - 12:00 noon, April 18, Student Name (print):

FINANCIAL MATHEMATICS WITH ADVANCED TOPICS MTHE7013A

MATH 361: Financial Mathematics for Actuaries I

Attempt QUESTIONS 1 and 2, and THREE other questions. Do not turn over until you are told to do so by the Invigilator.

A NOVEL BINOMIAL TREE APPROACH TO CALCULATE COLLATERAL AMOUNT FOR AN OPTION WITH CREDIT RISK

MFE/3F Questions Answer Key

1.15 (5) a b c d e. ?? (5) a b c d e. ?? (5) a b c d e. ?? (5) a b c d e FOR GRADER S USE ONLY: DEF T/F ?? M.C.

CHAPTER 17 OPTIONS AND CORPORATE FINANCE

Finance 651: PDEs and Stochastic Calculus Midterm Examination November 9, 2012

The discounted portfolio value of a selffinancing strategy in discrete time was given by. δ tj 1 (s tj s tj 1 ) (9.1) j=1

Finance 651: PDEs and Stochastic Calculus Midterm Examination November 9, 2012

MFE/3F Questions Answer Key

Homework Assignments

Introduction. Financial Economics Slides

Econ 422 Eric Zivot Fall 2005 Final Exam

Exotic Derivatives & Structured Products. Zénó Farkas (MSCI)

Lecture 16: Delta Hedging

B8.3 Week 2 summary 2018

******************************* The multi-period binomial model generalizes the single-period binomial model we considered in Section 2.

Name: 2.2. MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS. Please, circle the correct answer on the front page of this exam.

Binomial Option Pricing

University of North Carolina at Charlotte Mathematical Finance Program Comprehensive Exam. Spring, 2013

In general, the value of any asset is the present value of the expected cash flows on

Statistics Class 15 3/21/2012

Lecture 16. Options and option pricing. Lecture 16 1 / 22

The Recovery Theorem* Steve Ross

Simon Fraser University Spring 2014

= e S u S(0) From the other component of the call s replicating portfolio, we get. = e 0.015

Lockbox Separation. William F. Sharpe June, 2007

University of North Carolina at Charlotte Mathematical Finance Program Comprehensive Exam. Spring, 2014

Valuation of Options: Theory

B6302 B7302 Sample Placement Exam Answer Sheet (answers are indicated in bold)

Review of Derivatives I. Matti Suominen, Aalto

M3F22/M4F22/M5F22 EXAMINATION SOLUTIONS

Lecture Quantitative Finance Spring Term 2015

Two Types of Options

Computational Finance. Computational Finance p. 1

University of California, Los Angeles Department of Statistics. Final exam 07 June 2013

Stochastic Calculus for Finance

Department of Economics ECO 204 Microeconomic Theory for Commerce Test 2

Economic Risk and Decision Analysis for Oil and Gas Industry CE School of Engineering and Technology Asian Institute of Technology

M339W/389W Financial Mathematics for Actuarial Applications University of Texas at Austin Sample In-Term Exam I Instructor: Milica Čudina

MATH6911: Numerical Methods in Finance. Final exam Time: 2:00pm - 5:00pm, April 11, Student Name (print): Student Signature: Student ID:

CHAPTER 10 OPTION PRICING - II. Derivatives and Risk Management By Rajiv Srivastava. Copyright Oxford University Press

4. (10 pts) Portfolios A and B lie on the capital allocation line shown below. What is the risk-free rate X?

Energy Derivatives Final Exam Professor Pirrong Spring, 2011

FINANCIAL OPTION ANALYSIS HANDOUTS

Chapter 15: Jump Processes and Incomplete Markets. 1 Jumps as One Explanation of Incomplete Markets

AFTERNOON SESSION. Date: Wednesday, April 26, 2017 Time: 1:30 p.m. 3:45 p.m. INSTRUCTIONS TO CANDIDATES

Microeconomics Qualifying Exam

Examiner s report F9 Financial Management June 2015

Writing a Percent as a Decimal

Binomial model: numerical algorithm

A&J Flashcards for Exam MFE/3F Spring Alvin Soh

MATH 425 EXERCISES G. BERKOLAIKO

Introduction Random Walk One-Period Option Pricing Binomial Option Pricing Nice Math. Binomial Models. Christopher Ting.

1 Parameterization of Binomial Models and Derivation of the Black-Scholes PDE.

Economathematics. Problem Sheet 1. Zbigniew Palmowski. Ws 2 dw s = 1 t

Advanced Quantitative Methods for Asset Pricing and Structuring

Option Pricing. Chapter Discrete Time

Transcription:

Solutions FINAL EXAM 22 SPRING Sridhar Seshadri B9.238. Answer all questions. Answer questions and 2 before attempting question 3. The exam is closed book and closed notes (except for 4 pages of notes). Please write clearly, be brief, and show all steps for calculations. If I have asked for an explation no credit will be given for that part unless the explation is correct. Question carries 65 points, question 2 has 35 points. Question 3 has bonus points.. Consider a binomial stock price model with parameters u =.3, d =.77, S =, and T = 3. (The figures for u and d are rounded; assume still that u = /d ). The interest rate is r =.2. a. Compute the price process of an American put option with strike price e = 9. What is the optimal exercising time? (2 pts.) Most students got this correct. If t= price incorrect took off 2 points. Stock Price Process t= t= t=2 t=3 2.97 6.9 3 3 7.7 7.7 5.929 4.565 American Put Price Process r.2 q.83435 u.3 u.76923 t= t= t=2 t=3.2553.8278.99699.3.3 3.7 4.435 Early exercise optimal at time =, price = 7.7

b. Compute the price process of an up and out call option on the same stock as above with barrier k = and e = 3. This option is similar to a usual call option except that if the historical maximum price of the stock is larger than then the up and out call pays nothing at expiry. Give your result in a tree form. Verify that the time zero price can be written as the expected discounted value of a contingent claim at time 3 (in other words verify that the pricing formula, V = E Q [X/B 3 ] for some appropriate contingent claim X. (5 pts.) t= t= t=2 t=3.658642.3 4.7.93485 3.4456.56533 If did not get the out part correct took off 5 points. X = 4.7 w.p. 2 x q (-q)^2 and.58533 w.p. (-q)^3 Thus time zero price = (4.7 x 2 x.83 x.7 2 +.56522 x.7 3 )/(.2) 3 Many students lost one point because they used 3 q (-q)^2 but the option pays only on two paths, and is out on one of the three paths (at t=). b.is the American put option in part (a) attaible? If so compute the replicating trading strategy. Carefully show the value of the portfolio corresponding to this TS, the gain, the discounted value of the portfolio and the discounted gain all on a tree. What do you conclude from the tree of discounted gains? (2 pts.) Each TS was worth 5 points (there is one TS at t=, one at t=, and two at t=2). H -.2447 Time = H 2.6469 Cost.99958 H -.264 H.34763 Cost.2553 Time= Stock Price = 3 H -.24528 Time=2 H.799926 Stock Price = Cost.82442 2

The gain calculations were worth 5 points. Gain -.997 Disctd Gain -.997 -.997 -.747 -.752.3.3 -.997 -.997 -.997 -.786 -.7527.5347.87468 Based on above I believe that a risk averse person should sell the option at time and liquidate the portfolio too. 2. In this model we have a single risky security with prices (not discounted) shown below. The interest rate is assumed to be % for the first period, but % if S =8.8 and 9% if S =3.2. Consider the chooser option with t =, T = 2, and e =, i.e., at time the buyer can decide whether the option will be a call or a put option with expiry 2 and strike price. 8.8 2. 7.26 2. 3.2 9.36 3

rnpm rnpm t= t=2 2..5.245455 8.8.5 put 7.26.5 2.74 2..7 3.2.5 9.36.3 q.5 q2.5.3 t= t=2 t= t=2 2..245455.954545 t= 2.74 chooser 2.363846 call 2. 3.9557 2. 3.9557 9.36 9.36 a. What decision should the buyer make at time if S = 8.8? What should be the decision if S = 3.2? (5 pts.) Each rnpm carried 3 points. There are 3 rnpm calculations. Keep put if price falls else keep call. b. Compute the price process for the above chooser option (time, and 2 prices). Give your results in a tree form. Is this price process a Q-martingale, explain? (5 pts.) It (the discounted price) is a Q-MTG as the price process is that of a t=3 CC. c. Calculate and show the time zero, time one and time two future and forward price of the stock for delivery at time 2. Is any of the prices a Q-martingale (explain or show briefly why or why not)? (5 pts.) future forward 2. 2. 9.68 9.68 7.26 7.26.979.99832 2. 2. 4.278 4.278 9.36 9.36 Future price process is a Q-MTG. (one point) Forward price process is not a Q-MTG. (one point) 4

3. Short questions ( points) a. Use the tree for question 2. A firm is thinking about issuing a convertible bond. The bond will yield an interest rate equal to that period s interest rate. The interest is paid each period. The face value of the bond at time zero equals $. The holder of this bond has the option to either exchange it for one unit of the stock at time or not to exchange it (thus keep the bond until time period 2). What should be the fair price of the convertible bond at time zero? We keep bond if price = 8.8 else convert. Payoffs are: $ if stock price = 8.8 and $4.2 if stock price = $3.2. Discounted value at t= is: (.5* +.5*4.2)/. = $.45 This is just like a chooser pricing method. Keep the more valuable object! b. Use the tree for question 2. What is the fair time-zero price of the contingent claim that pays $ at time 2? What is the relationship between this price and the forward price for time-2 delivery of the stock at time zero? Explain. The t= price = $.5 + $.5 =. 83345.....8666 Now $/.83345 = $.998 which is the forward price. The reason this is so either one can buy the stock at t= or arrange for getting the forward price with probability one at t=3 (for which one pays the forward price multiplied by.83345) and exchange it for the stock at t=2. Both the strategies are equivalent and should have the same price. The explation was worth 2 points. Happy Summer!! 5