Options and Derivatives

Similar documents
12 Bounds. on Option Prices. Answers to Questions and Problems

Chapter 17. Options and Corporate Finance. Key Concepts and Skills

Advanced Corporate Finance. 5. Options (a refresher)

CHAPTER 17 OPTIONS AND CORPORATE FINANCE

Derivative Instruments

Option Properties Liuren Wu

LECTURE 1 : Introduction and Review of Option Payoffs

Introduction to Financial Derivatives

Forwards, Futures, Options and Swaps

Market, exchange over the counter, standardised ( amt, maturity), OTC private, specifically tailored)

Lecture 2. Agenda: Basic descriptions for derivatives. 1. Standard derivatives Forward Futures Options

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

E120: Principles of Engineering Economics Part 1: Concepts. (20 points)

Options Markets: Introduction

Option Pricing. Simple Arbitrage Relations. Payoffs to Call and Put Options. Black-Scholes Model. Put-Call Parity. Implied Volatility

EC3070 FINANCIAL DERIVATIVES FUTURES: MARKING TO MARKET

Chapter 2. An Introduction to Forwards and Options. Question 2.1

Lecture 12. Stock Option boundary conditions. Agenda:

LECTURE 12. Volatility is the question on the B/S which assumes constant SD throughout the exercise period - The time series of implied volatility

ECO OPTIONS AND FUTURES SPRING Options

S 0 C (30, 0.5) + P (30, 0.5) e rt 30 = PV (dividends) PV (dividends) = = $0.944.

The graph on which we plot payoffs

C T P T S T

I. Reading. A. BKM, Chapter 20, Section B. BKM, Chapter 21, ignore Section 21.3 and skim Section 21.5.

Lecture 7: Trading Strategies Involve Options ( ) 11.2 Strategies Involving A Single Option and A Stock

Options. Investment Management. Fall 2005

Boundary conditions for options

#10. Problems 1 through 10, part a). Fi8000 Practice Set #1 Check Solutions 1. Payoff. Payoff #8 Payoff S

AF4 Investment Products Part 3: Derivatives

Chapter 2 Questions Sample Comparing Options

Page 1. Real Options for Engineering Systems. Financial Options. Leverage. Session 4: Valuation of financial options

Lecture 5. Trading With Portfolios. 5.1 Portfolio. How Can I Sell Something I Don t Own?

MS-E2114 Investment Science Lecture 10: Options pricing in binomial lattices

ECON4510 Finance Theory Lecture 10

Appendix: Basics of Options and Option Pricing Option Payoffs

Financial Derivatives Section 3

5. You purchase one IBM September 160 put contract for a premium of $2.62. What is your maximum possible profit? (See Figure 15.1.

ActuarialBrew.com. Exam MFE / 3F. Actuarial Models Financial Economics Segment. Solutions 2014, 1 st edition

University of Waterloo Final Examination

Options and Derivative Securities

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

Valuation of Options: Theory

Notes for Lecture 5 (February 28)

Financial Economics 4378 FALL 2013 FINAL EXAM There are 10 questions Total Points 100. Question 1 (10 points)

FREDERICK OWUSU PREMPEH

P1.T3. Financial Markets & Products. Hull, Options, Futures & Other Derivatives. Trading Strategies Involving Options

Help Session 4. David Sovich. Washington University in St. Louis

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

Lecture 1 Definitions from finance

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

OPTION MARKETS AND CONTRACTS

Copyright 2015 by IntraDay Capital Management Ltd. (IDC)

Option Pricing: basic principles Definitions Value boundaries simple arbitrage relationships put-call parity

University of Texas at Austin. HW Assignment 5. Exchange options. Bull/Bear spreads. Properties of European call/put prices.

Cash Flows on Options strike or exercise price

So we turn now to many-to-one matching with money, which is generally seen as a model of firms hiring workers

3 + 30e 0.10(3/12) > <

Fixed-Income Analysis. Assignment 7

Chapter 9 - Mechanics of Options Markets

Q&A, 10/08/03. To buy and sell options do we need to contact the broker or can it be dome from programs like Bloomberg?

Valuing Put Options with Put-Call Parity S + P C = [X/(1+r f ) t ] + [D P /(1+r f ) t ] CFA Examination DERIVATIVES OPTIONS Page 1 of 6

Lecture 1, Jan

ActuarialBrew.com. Exam MFE / 3F. Actuarial Models Financial Economics Segment. Solutions 2014, 2nd edition

Some Important Concepts in Financial and Derivative Markets. Some Important Concepts in Financial and Derivative Markets

CHAPTER 20 Spotting and Valuing Options

Introduction to Financial Derivatives

Théorie Financière. Financial Options

Help Session 2. David Sovich. Washington University in St. Louis

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

Chapter 22: Real Options

University of Waterloo Final Examination

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS

2 The binomial pricing model

TEACHING NOTE 98-04: EXCHANGE OPTION PRICING

Chapter 20: Financial Options

INV2601 DISCUSSION CLASS SEMESTER 2 INVESTMENTS: AN INTRODUCTION INV2601 DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE, RISK MANAGEMENT AND BANKING

Properties of Stock Options

S u =$55. S u =S (1+u) S=$50. S d =$48.5. S d =S (1+d) C u = $5 = Max{55-50,0} $1.06. C u = Max{Su-X,0} (1+r) (1+r) $1.06. C d = $0 = Max{48.

MATH3075/3975 FINANCIAL MATHEMATICS TUTORIAL PROBLEMS

SOCIETY OF ACTUARIES FINANCIAL MATHEMATICS. EXAM FM SAMPLE QUESTIONS Financial Economics

Lecture 10 An introduction to Pricing Forward Contracts.

B6302 Sample Placement Exam Academic Year

Chapter 15. Learning Objectives & Agenda. Economic Benefits Provided by. Options. Options

P1.T3. Hull, Chapter 10. Bionic Turtle FRM Video Tutorials. By: David Harper CFA, FRM, CIPM

MATH 6911 Numerical Methods in Finance

FX Options. Outline. Part I. Chapter 1: basic FX options, standard terminology, mechanics

INTRODUCTION TO ARBITRAGE PRICING OF FINANCIAL DERIVATIVES

A GLOSSARY OF FINANCIAL TERMS MICHAEL J. SHARPE, MATHEMATICS DEPARTMENT, UCSD

Introduction to Options

Lesson IV: Currency Derivatives, an Overview

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

Arbitrage Enforced Valuation of Financial Options. Outline

Answers to Selected Problems

Equity Option Valuation Practical Guide

covered warrants uncovered an explanation and the applications of covered warrants

Week 5. Options: Basic Concepts

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

1.1 Basic Financial Derivatives: Forward Contracts and Options

Final Exam. 5. (24 points) Multiple choice questions: in each case, only one answer is correct.

Conoco s Value and IPO: Real Options Analysis 1

Transcription:

Options and Derivatives For 9.220, Term 1, 2002/03 02_Lecture17 & 18.ppt Student Version Outline 1. Introduction 2. Option Definitions 3. Option Payoffs 4. Intuitive Option Valuation 5. Put-Call Parity 6. Summary and Conclusions 1

Introduction We now turn our attention to options. Almost every decision can be framed in terms of an option. The more we understand options, the more we can understand the valuation implications of decisions, flexibility and information. An understanding of options will also help us understand more about what affects the values of equity and debt. We will start our analysis with financial options, and then later turn to real options and corporate securities as options. Option Definitions Derivative Security: a derivative security is a financial security that is a claim on another security or underlying asset. Examples include options, warrants, rights, futures, swaps, convertibles, etc. The value of the derivative is dependent on the value of the underlying asset. 2

Option If you have an option, then you have the right to do something. I.e., you can make a decision or take some action. The option owner has a choice to make. Usually the choice can be made over time after more information is known. Having an option is valuable; options never have a negative value, because, at worst, the option owner can discard the option and not take any action. Call Option The owner of a call option on an asset has the RIGHT TO BUY the asset (e.g., share of stock) for a prespecified price (called the exercise or strike price) during some time period (that ends with the expiration date or maturity date). The call option owner is said to be long in the option. The owner possesses the right to do something (the right to buy). The call option issuer (called the call option writer) is said to be short in the option. If the call option owner exercises his/her option, then the call option writer has an obligation to sell the asset and must fulfill the terms of the contract. 3

Put Option The owner of the put option has the RIGHT TO SELL an asset (e.g., share of stock) at a prespecified price (the exercise or strike price) during some time period. As with call options, The option owner is said to be long in the option. The put owner possesses the right to do something (the right to sell). The put option issuer (called the put option writer) is said to be short in the option. If the put option owner exercises his/her option, then the put option writer has an obligation to buy the asset and must fulfill the terms of the contract. Option Writer The option writer is the person who created (or wrote) the option and then sold it to someone else. As the writer did not previously own the option, the act of writing and selling the option is equivalent to shortselling the option. The option writer has sold an option or right to the option owner. Thus the writer has taken on an obligation to act on the instruction of the option owner as specified by the option contract. When selling the option to the buyer, the writer receives as compensation the option premium = the price the buyer pays for the option. 4

American and European Options American options can be exercises at any time up to and including the expiration date. European options can only be exercised on the expiration date All else equal, an American option must be worth at least as much as a European Option I m in the money An option is said to be in the money if exercising it would produce a positive payoff. An at the money option would generate a zero payoff if exercised. An out of the money option would generate a negative payoff if exercised. (Thus an out of the money option would never be exercised.) 5

Option Payoffs at Expiration It is useful to examine the payoffs of options when they are about to expire. At this point in time, the owner is forced to make the decision to exercise or to abandon the option. The option owner will exercise if the option is in the money when it is about to expire. Consider Call and Put Options Long Call Option Payoff at Expiration (Option to Buy for Exercise Price = E) Stock Price Should call be exercised? (E=) Payoff $55 6

Long Call Option Payoff at Expiration If the call is in-the-money, it is worth S T - E. If the call is out-of-the-money, it is worthless. Therefore the value of the call when it is about to expire is as follows: C at = C et = Max[S T - E, 0] This assumes investors are rational and will not exercise to get a negative payoff. Where S T is the value of the stock at expiry (time T) E is the exercise price. C at is the value of an American call at expiry C et is the value of a European call at expiry Long Call Option Payoff at Expiration 60 40 Option payoffs ($) 20 0-20 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Stock price ($) -40-60 Exercise price = 7

Self Study fill in the blank cells Long Call Option Payoff at Expiration (Option to Buy for Exercise Price = E) Stock Price $20 $40 $60 $80 $120 $140 $160 Should call be exercised? (E=$80) Payoff Short Call Option Payoff at Expiration Stock Price $55 Will Owner exercise the Call? (E=) Payoff to Writer 8

Short Call Option Payoff at Expiration 60 40 Option payoffs ($) 20 0-20 0 10 20 30 40 50 Stock price ($) 60 70 80 90 100-40 -60 Exercise price = Short Call Payoff at Expiration The short call payoff is just the negative of the long call payoff. The payoff of the short call when it is about to expire is as follows: -C at = -C et = -Max[S T -E, 0] = Min[E-S T, 0] 9

Self Study fill in the blank cells Short Call Option Payoff at Expiration (Option to Buy for Exercise Price = E) Stock Price $20 $40 $60 $80 $120 $140 $160 Will Owner exercise the Call? (E=$80) Payoff to Writer Long Put Option Payoff at Expiration (Option to Sell for Exercise Price = E) Stock Price $55 Should put be exercised? (E=) Payoff 10

Long Put Payoff at Expiration At expiry, an American put option is worth the same as a European option with the same characteristics. If the put is in-the-money, it is worth E S T if exercised. If the put is out-of-the-money, it is worthless. Thus the long put payoff when the put is about to expire is as follows: P at = P et = Max[E - S T, 0] Where P at is the value of American Put at expiry P et is the value of European Put at expiry Long Put Option Payoff at Expiration 60 40 Option payoffs ($) 20 0-20 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Stock price ($) -40-60 Exercise price = 11

Self Study fill in the blank cells Long Put Option Payoff at Expiration (Option to Sell for Exercise Price = E) Stock Price $20 $40 $60 $80 $120 $140 $160 Should put be exercised? (E=$80) Payoff Short Put Option Payoff at Expiration Stock Price $55 Will put owner exercise? (E=) Payoff to Writer 12

Short Put Option Payoff at Expiration 60 40 Option payoffs ($) 20 0-20 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Stock price ($) -40-60 Exercise price = Short Put Payoff at Expiration The short put payoff is just the negative of the long put payoff. Thus the short put payoff when the put is about to expire is as follows: -P at = -P et = -Max[E - S T, 0] = Min[S T -E, 0] 13

Self Study fill in the blank cells Short Put Option Payoff at Expiration (Option to Sell for Exercise Price = E) Stock Price $20 $40 $60 $80 $120 $140 $160 Will Owner exercise the Put? (E=$80) Payoff to Writer Call Option Values with time left until expiration. In the previous slides, we saw the payoffs for options at the time of expiration. If the option was expiring, these payoffs for the long positions would represent the value of the options at expiration. If there is significant time left before the option expires, then the value of the option is different than the previous payoff amounts. The following slides examine call options and explain their valuation when there is time left before expiration. 14

Boundaries on an American call option s value In the best outcome, the result of owning a call option is that you will eventually own the underlying asset. If the underlying asset is the share of stock, then the most the call option could be worth is the current market price of the share of stock. This gives us an upper bound on the value of the call option. Upper Bound on the Value of an American Call $200 $175 $150 $ Value $150 $175 $200 $ Current Market Price of Stock 15

Lower Bound on the Value of an American Call Can an American call option sell for a price less than the payoff from exercising? Consider, for example, if E=100, S t =$120, and C at =$5 then Upper and Lower Bounds on the American Call Value $200 $175 $150 $ Value $150 $175 $200 $ Current Market Price of Stock 16

What is the actual value of the American Call? The actual value of the American Call depends on how much time there is until it expires, the underlying stock s total risk (σ), the risk-free interest rate over the life of the call, and obviously the stock price and exercise price. Actual Value of the American Call $ Value $200 $175 $150 $150 $175 $200 $ Current Market Price of Stock 17

Understanding the Value of the American Call 1 st Consider this area $ Value $200 $175 $150 Next, consider this area $150 $ Current Market Price of Stock Finally, consider this area $175 $200 Change in Call Option Value as the Time until Expiration Decreases $ Value $150 $175 $200 $ Current Market Price of Stock 18

Change in Call Option Value as the Risk of the Underlying Asset Decreases $ Value $150 $175 $200 $ Current Market Price of Stock Change in Call Option Value as the Risk-free Interest Rate Decreases $ Value $150 $175 $200 $ Current Market Price of Stock 19

Summary of Factors that Affect the American Call Option Value Factor A stock price increase Effect on value of the American call option Value rises An increase in the exercise price An increase in the stock s risk Value decreases Value increases A decrease in the time left until expiration A decrease in the risk-free rate Value decreases Value decreases Summary of Factors that Affect the American Put Option Value Factor A stock price increase Effect on value of the American put option Value decreases An increase in the exercise price An increase in the stock s risk A decrease in the time left until expiration A decrease in the risk-free rate Value increases Value increases (same as for call) Value decreases (same as for call) Value increases (PV of exercise price received is higher) 20

Questions for Discussion 1. Assuming there are no dividends paid, would it ever be optimal to exercise an American call option early (i.e., before the expiration date)? What does this imply about the values of American and European call options? 2. Assuming there are no dividends paid, would it ever be optimal to exercise an American put option early? What does this imply about the values of American and European put options? Put-call Parity Given the following securities: a call option, a put option, the underlying stock, and risk-free borrowing or lending; it is possible to replicate the payoffs from one security by holding a combination of the other three. To prevent arbitrage, it must hold that the value of the replicated security equals the sum of the values of the components used to replicate it. This leads to a relationship between put and call options (which holds precisely for European options). The relationship is called Put-Call Parity 21

Synthetic Security Definition: A synthetic security is a portfolio of other securities which will have the same cash flows as the original security being copied. To determine the relationship between put and call options, we can construct a synthetic call and equate its value to a real call option. Construction of a Synthetic European Call: initial transactions at date t Initial Transactions: buy 1 share of stock (long the stock) borrow the present value of the exercise price (E) at the risk free rate (or short the risk-free asset) buy (long) the put option with the same underlying stock, exercise price and expiration date as the call option Initial net cash flow (will be an outflow): -S t +(PV of E) -P et -S t + (PV of E) - P et where S t is the stock price at time t P et is the price at time t of the European put option 22

Synthetic European Call: transactions on the expiration date (T) Final cash flows given the different relevant states of nature (which depend on whether S T is less than or greater than E): liquidate the long stock position (sell the stock) liquidate the short-risk free asset position (repay the loan) liquidate the long put option position (discard or exercise depending upon which is optimal) Net cash flow at the expiration date T: S T < E +S T -E +(E-S T ) 0 S T E +S T -E 0 +(S T -E) Potential arbitrage strategies: If the real call is more expensive than the synthetic call, we could go long a synthetic call and write a real call. If the real call is less expensive, we could short a synthetic call and buy a real call. These strategies create a positive cash flow at date t. Under either strategy, the final net cash flows at date T (or final payoffs) are guaranteed to be zero under all relevant states of nature. The above strategies would yield a positive initial cash inflow followed by zero cash flows with no risk. All investors would try to exploit the arbitrage opportunity. As they did so, the prices of the synthetic and real calls would adjust (until they became equal) and the arbitrage opportunity would disappear. The concept of no-arbitrage can be used to show the relationship between the prices of European put and call options by equating the price of a synthetic call to the price of a real call. 23

Put-Call Parity Condition Cash flows from purchasing (or constructing) the option Equating the cash flows and rearranging terms, we get the following relationships: Real Call -C et Synthetic Call -S t + (PV of E) - P et -C et =-S t + (PV of E) - P et C et =S t - (PV of E) + P et P et = C et -S t + (PV of E) Where C et is the cost of the European call option at time t S t is the stock price at time t P et is the cost of the European put option at time t PV of E is the present value at time t of the exercise price Note: The put-call parity condition holds precisely for European options. However, because it may be optimal to exercise an American put early, the value of the American put will be higher than what is determined above. Self Study fill in the blank cells Construction of a Synthetic European Put: initial transactions at date t Initial Transactions: fill in the empty cells short 1 share of stock Invest the present value of the exercise price (E) at the risk free rate (or long the risk-free asset) Buy a call option on the stock with same exercise price and same expiration date Initial net cash flow (will be an outflow): where S t is the stock price at time t C et is the price at time t of the European call option 24

Self Study fill in the blank cells Synthetic European Put: transactions on the expiration date (T) Final cash flows given the different relevant states of nature (which depend on whether S T is less than or greater than E): liquidate the short stock position (buy the stock) liquidate the long risk-free asset position (collect the proceeds from the investment) liquidate the long call option position (discard or exercise depending upon which is optimal) Net cash flow at the expiration date T: S T < E E-S T S T E 0 Put-Call Parity Example Suppose a call option on Macrosoft is currently selling for $9.50. The call has E= and 6 months until expiration. The risk-free rate of interest is 4% per year effective and Macrosoft is currently trading for $76 per share. What is the value of a European put option on Macrosoft (with the same terms as the call: E= and 6 months until expiration)? If a European put with E=$80 and 6 months until expiration is selling for $9.95, what is the equivalent call value? 25

Self Study calculate the bolded cells Put-Call Parity Examples C et $9.30 $7.54 $9.84 P et $5.01 $7.25 $4.80 S $92 $88 $83 E $90 $90 $80 Notes: R f =3.5% per year effective Expiration is in 9 months for each option $6.83 $7.79 $77 $80 $11.30 $4.51.00 $70 $5.03 $8.25 $65 $70.00 Summary and Conclusions The two main types of financial options are calls (option to buy) and puts (option to sell). The factors that affect the value of options are the underlying asset price, the volatility of the underlying asset returns, the exercise price, the risk-free rate, and the time until expiration of the option. We can construct synthetic options, and from these we can relate the prices of put and call options (the Put-Call Parity Condition). As all options have value, understanding what impacts the value of an option is important and will help us understand other finance concepts that contain option characteristics. Including the option to continue, expand, contract or abandon a capital budgeting project. Special option-like features that are part of other financial securities Including call and conversion features of bonds and preferred stock, the limited liability feature of common stock, etc. 26