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Option Basics
Professor XXXXXCourse Name / Number
2
Economic Benefits Provided by Options
Derivative securities are instruments that derive their value from the value of other
assets.Derivatives include options, futures, and
swaps.
Options and other derivative securities have several important economic functions:
– Help bring about more efficient allocation of risk – Save transactions costs…sometimes it is cheaper to trade a
derivative than its underlying asset.– Permit investments strategies that would not otherwise be possible
3
Options Vocabulary
Generally, neither trader has any connection to the underlying firm.
Long position
• The buyer of an option has a long position, and has the ability to exercise the option.
Short position
• The seller (or writer) of an option has a short position, and must fulfill the contract if the buyer exercises.
• As compensation, the seller receives the option premium.
Options trade on an exchange (such as CBOE) or in the over-the-counter market.
4
Options Vocabulary
Call option • Gives the holder the right to
purchase an asset at a specified price on or before a certain date
Put option • Gives the holder the right to sell as
asset at a specified price on or before a certain date
Strike price or exercise price: the price specified for purchase or sale in an option contract
American or European
option
• American options allow holders to exercise at any point prior to expiration.
• European options allow holders to exercise only on the expiration date.
5
Moneyness of Options
Call Put
S>X In-the-money Out-of-the-money
S=X At-the-money At-the-money
S<X Out-of-the-money
In-the-money
S = current stock price
X = strike price
6
Option Quotations
50
50
45
45
Strike
6.503.50June46.31
5.251.50March46.31
3.885.88June46.31
2.384.00March46.31
PutCallExpire
sGeneral Electric
In-the-money callsOut-of-the-money puts
In-the-money putsOut-of-the-money calls
• Option quotations specify the per share price for an option contract, which is a contract to buy or sell 100 shares of the underlying stock.– CBOE options expire on the third Saturday of the
expiration month.
7
Intrinsic and Time Value of Options
Intrinsic value
• For in the money options: the difference between the current price of the underlying asset and the strike price
• For out of the money options: the intrinsic value is zero
Time value• The difference between the option’s
intrinsic value and its market price (premium)
• Consider the March call with $45 strike price from previous table:– Intrinsic value = $46.31 - $45 = $1.31– Time value considers the size of the option’s
premium: $4 - $1.31 = $2.69.
8
Payoff Diagrams
Show the value of an option, or the value at expiration
Y-axis plots exercise value or “intrinsic value.”
X-axis plots price of underlying asset.
Use payoff diagrams for:
Long and short positions
Gross and net positions (the net positions subtract the option
premium)
Payoff: the price of the option at expiration date
9
Long Call Option Payoffs
x = $50, premium = $5
Payoff
at
Exp
irati
on
-5stock price50 55
slope = 1
Net payoff
Gross payoff
10
Short Call Option Payoffsx = $50, premium = $5
Payoff
at
exp
irati
on +5 stock price
50
slope = -1
55
Net payoffGross payoff
• Both long and short positions have zero net payoff at a price of $55.– At a price of $45, the buyer loses $5, the seller gains $5.– At a price of $65, the buyer gains $10, the seller loses $10.
11
Long Put Option Payoffs
x = 50, premium = $4Payoff
at
exp
irati
on
-4
Price of stock
50
50
46
46
Net payoff
Gross payoff
12
Short Put Option Payoffs
x = 50, premium = $4Payoff
at
exp
irati
on
4
Stock price5046
-50
Net payoff
Gross payoff
13
Portfolios of Options
Look at payoff diagrams for combinations of options rather than just one.
Diagrams show the range of potential strategies made possible by options.
Some positions, in combination with other positions, can be a form of portfolio insurance.
An example: a portfolio that allows an investor to speculate on the volatility (or lack thereof) of a
stock rather than betting on which direction it will move
14
Long StraddleCall x = 60, premium = $5, Put x = 60, premium = $4
60
6951
-9
Net payoff
Gross payoff
• Buy a put and a call of the same stock at the same strike price and the same expiration date.– Profits come with large price changes in either direction,
so a straddle represents a volatility position.– Positive net payoff results if the price rises above $69 or
falls below $51.
15
Short StraddleCall x = 60, premium = $5, Put x = 60, premium = $4
60
+9
51 69
Net payoff
Gross payoff
• Sell a put and a call of the same stock at the same strike price and the same expiration date.– Provides opposite payoffs of the long straddle.– Profits result if the stock price stays between $51 and $69.
16
Other Option Portfolio Payoffs
Now look at portfolios containing options, stocks, and bonds.
Looking at these payoffs will help lead us to an important option pricing relationship: put-call
parity.
Construct portfolios that include options, stocks and bonds.
Stock and put options
Bond and call options
17
Gross Payoff of Stock + Put
x
x
Stock price
Payoff
at
expir
ati
on $X = strike price of put
• This position allows an investor to profit if stock price rises above $X. • If stock price falls below $X the portfolio provides protection in that
the put option allows the investor to sell at a price no lower than $X.
18
Gross Payoff of Bond + Call
x
x
stock price
$X = strike price of call and face value of bond
Payoff
at
expir
ati
on
• The bond assures a minimum payoff of $X• The call allows for a higher payoff if the stock price risesThis payoff diagram and the one before are identical!
19
Put-Call ParityFuture payoffs of “stock+put” are identical to payoffs
of “bond+call” provided.
– Put and call have same exercise price and expiration date.– The underlying stock pays no dividends during the life of the
options.– Put and call are European options.– Bond is risk-free, zero-coupon, FV = strike (X).– Bond matures when options expire.
If two assets, A and B, have the same future payoffs with certainty, then they should sell for
the same price now.Price of put + price of stock = Price of call + price of bond
P + S = C + BP + S = C + PV(X)
20
Using Put-Call Parity
Put-call parity relationship can be used in:
– Finding arbitrage opportunities– Corporate finance applications
• Long put: P = C + PV(X) – S• Long stock: S = C + PV(X) –
P• Short stock: -S = - C - PV(X)
+ P• Long call: C = S + P – PV(X)
Using put-call parity, we can
construct synthetic positions
In these equations “+” means “buy” and “-” means “sell” or “short sell.”
For example, the first line shows that buying a put is equivalent to simultaneously buying a call and a bond and shorting the
stock.
21
Put-Call Parity and Arbitrage
Assumptions • Stock price = $46; call price (X =
$45) $5.• Options expire in 3 months.• Risk-free rate for 3-month T-bill is
5%.
P + S = C + BP + $46 = $5 + ($45/(1.05).25) P = $3.45
What if the 3-month put option with X = $45 actually sells for $4 rather than $3.45?
The put is overpriced, so you want to sell it.
To offset the risk you must buy a synthetic put:
P = B + C – S.
22
Put-Call Parity Arbitrage
If stock price is
Short put Long bond
Long call Short Stock
Net value is
35 -10 45 0 -35 0
40 -5 45 0 -40 0
45 0 45 0 -45 0
50 0 45 5 -50 0
55 0 45 10 -55 0
Sell a put for $4, buy a bond for $44.45, buy a call for $5, and short the stock for $46.
Risk-free profit of $0.55 because we sold one real put and bought one “synthetic put” with identical risk.
23
Put-Call Parity Corporate Finance Applications
P-C parity offers alternative ways to get something done financially if the most obvious approach is
blocked.
• An example…• Netscape went public at $26/share, but price immediately
rose into the mid $50s.– In pre-IPO phase, Times-Mirror bought 2 million shares
of Netscape at $2 per share.– In exchange for the good price, TM agreed not to sell
their Netscape shares for two years.
What problem does TM face once Netscape has gone public?
24
Times-Mirror and Netscape
TM would like to sell their NSCP shares but they can’t…or can they?
1. Issued bond with face value equal to one Netscape share.
2. TM held the option to pay back investors one Netscape share when the bonds matured (a put option). 3. Investors held the option to demand one Netscape share from TM in exchange for par value (a call option).
d. Net transaction: -B – P + C….but this just equals –S, a synthetic sale of stock !
25
Factors Affecting Option Prices(holding other factors equal)
Price of underlying
asset
• Asset price and call price are positively related.
• Asset price and put price are negatively related.
Time to expiration
• More time usually makes options more valuable.
Strike price
• Higher X means higher put price; lower X means higher call price.
Interest rate
• Calls: higher “r” means higher call value
• Puts: higher “r” reduces put value
26
Volatility and Option Prices
Suppose a stock now worth $40 might increase or decrease in value by $10.
Call option with X = $40 will pay $10 or $0
Now suppose a stock worth $40 might increase or decrease in value by $20.
Call option with X = $40 will pay $20 or $0
The 2nd call option is more valuable…upside is better, downside the same as the 1st option.
27
Binomial Option Pricing
An extremely flexible tool for valuing all types of options, real and financial
– Presumes stock price moves either up or down in discrete steps over a given time interval
– Derives an option price using the principle of “no arbitrage”
a. Find a hedged portfolio
Portfolio of stock and call options that gives a constant payoff in the future regardless of whether the stock goes up or down
Mixture of stock and options in this portfolio is called hedge ratio.
28
Calculating Binomial Option Prices
b. If the hedged portfolio offers risk-free payoff, determine the portfolio’s current value by
discounting future payoff at the risk-free rate.
c. Once we know the value of the portfolio, can separate this value into its component pieces.
• The value of the stock and the value of the option
Three step procedure
• Step 1: Create a risk-free portfolio.• Step 2: Calculate the present value of
the portfolio.• Step 3: Determine the price of the
option.
29
An Example
Stock price now
Price in one year
$50
$60
$40
Assume: rf = 5%
Determine price of 1-year call option with x = $50.
30
Step 1
Calculate option’s payoffs for each possible future stock price.
– - If stock goes to $60, option pays off $10.– If stock goes to $40, option pays off $0.
Determine the composition of the hedged portfolio…start by assuming it contains one share of stock and
“h” call options.
• Portfolio value = 1 share + h options• If stock goes up, portfolio will pay:
• $60 + $10 x h.• If stock goes down, portfolio will pay:
• $40 + $0 x h.
31
Step 1
To determine the composition of the hedged portfolio, find the number of options that equates the
payoffs:
• $60 + $10h = $40 + $0h
Payoff = $40
Hedged portfolio is long one share of stock and short two call options.
Determine the exact dollar payoff of the hedged portfolio:
• $60 + $10h = $40 + $0hThus, one stock plus two short call options replicates the payoffs of a one-year, risk-free bond with a face value of
$40.
h = -2
32
Steps 2 and 3
Determine present value of hedged portfolio:
• Payoff = $40• rf = 5%
PV = $40/1.05 = $38.10
Separate the current value of the portfolio into its component parts:
• $50 of this value is the current price of the stock.• The difference between $38.10 and $50 is the revenue
received for the two call options sold.• $50 – 2 x call price = $38.10
Call price = $5.95
33
A More Reasonable Approach
4 periods,3 months each
52.5050
45
50
3 months 3 months
47.50
57.5055
60
55
50
45
40
42.50
47.50
3 months 3 months
52.50
Options: contracts that grant the buyer the right to buy or sell stock at a fixed price.
Options provide real economic benefit to society.
Put-call parity establishes a link between market prices of calls, puts, shares, and
bonds.
Factors that affect option prices: underlying price, time to maturity, strike price, interest
rate and volatility.
Option Basics
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