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Options and obligations

Options and obligations

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Options and obligations . Margining system for Seller of Options. Initial Margin- Risk margin Premium margin Assignment margin Initial margin –According SPAN formula- Historical volatility of asset in the past If price of the asset increases- Call Writer’s financial loss increases - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Options and obligations

Options and obligations

Page 2: Options and obligations

Margining system for Seller of Options• Initial Margin- Risk margin• Premium margin• Assignment margin• Initial margin –According SPAN formula-

Historical volatility of asset in the past• If price of the asset increases- Call Writer’s

financial loss increases• If price of the asset decreases- Put Writers’

financial loss increases

Page 3: Options and obligations

Margining-Continuing

• Premium margin- Deposit of collected premiums by the Seller of options with the clearing house

• Increase in the premium- result additional margin to be brought than at the premium when they sold options and vice versa

Page 4: Options and obligations

Long call and short call -example

• Assume that Mr.ABC has purchased a call option on stock X at Rs.100 by paying a premium of Re1 to the seller of a call option Mr.PQR .Let us see the range of prices above and below the exercise price and observe the profit trend of both the buyer and the seller

Page 5: Options and obligations

Long put and Short put –example

• Assume that Mr.ABC has purchased a put option on stock X at Rs.100 by paying a premium of Re1 to the seller of a put option Mr.PQR . Let us see the range of prices above and below the exercise price and observe the profit trend of both buyer and seller

Page 6: Options and obligations

In the money-At the money

• Call option: when stock price raises than the strike price and brings money to the buyer

• Put option :when stock price declines than the strike price and brings money to the buyer

• When the strike and stock prices are the same – no advantage position to exercise

Page 7: Options and obligations

Out of the money

• There is no definitive advantage in exercising an option in situation –Out of the money – no need to abandon .

• Example

Market scenario

Call option Put option

MP>SP I-T-M O-T-MMP=SP A-T-M A-T-MMP<SP O-T-M I-T-M

Page 8: Options and obligations

Intrinsic value and Time value of the option

• Option premium-Option price• =Intrinsic value + Time value or Extrinsic value • Intrinsic value of the option : the part of

premium which represents to the extent to which the option is I-T-M;Intrinsic value of the option – never be negative : A-T-M and O-T-M => intrinsic value is zero

Page 9: Options and obligations

Intrinsic value of the option

• Consider a share currently trading at Rs.235. Assume you hold a Rs.200 call and a Rs.260 call . At the same time you also hold a Rs.200 put and a Rs.260

Page 10: Options and obligations

Time value of the option • Quantification of the probability of the change

in the underlying price to become in the money during the remaining period of option

• Time value= Option premium-Intrinsic value • Value of option-Intirnsic value= Time value of

the option • If the option is A-T-M and O-T-M the entire

premium is time value of option

Page 11: Options and obligations

Effect of time decay

• Assume that we bought a call option with exercise price of Rs235 and the share price in the market is Rs 240 . It is also known that we paid a premium of Rs.32 for this 60 day contract How much of this 2 month option’s premium is time value ?

Page 12: Options and obligations

Valuation of Options B-S model• Black and Scholes -1973• Direct work of Rober merton , Black and Scholes • 1997-Nobel winners Robert merton and Scholes • 1995- Black died • “The pricing of options and corporate liabilities “• Stock price , strike price , expiration date , risk free

rate of return and the standard deviation of stock return (volatility)

Page 13: Options and obligations

B-S model

• C=SN(d1)-Xe-rt N(d2)• C= price of the call option• S= price of the underlying stock• X=options exercise price• R=risk free interest• T=current time until expiration• N=area under the normal curve• D1=[ln(S/X)+(r+σ2/2)T]/ σ T1/2

• D2 = d1- σ T1/2

Page 14: Options and obligations

Option Problems-Call and Put

• Tata Motors stock is currently selling for Rs.750 . There is call option on Tata motors with a maturity of 90 days and an exercise price of Rs.800 .The volatility in the stock price is estimated to be 22% The risk free rate is 8% What will be the price of call option?

Page 15: Options and obligations

Synthetic Long call strategy –Buy Stock and Buy Put

• Buy the stock – anticipating the price rise • Instead – If price comes down –to have insurance –

Put option • The strike price either equals the stock bought or

below i-e A-T-M or O-T-M• Strategy is resembling like a call option but not real

call option • Risk (Maximum losses)Stock price +put premium

–put strike price • Break even : Stock price+ Put premium• Investor- conservatively bullish

Page 16: Options and obligations

Synthetic call –Buy stock and Buy put

• Holding the stock for reaping the benefits ,dividends ,rights and so on but at the same time insuring against an adverse price movement

• Simple buy call- no underlying • Example • ABC ltd is trading at Rs.4000 on 4th July• Buy 100 shares of the stock at Rs4000• Buy 100 July put options with a strike price of Rs.3900 at a

premium of Rs143.80 per put • Pay off the synthetic call: Payoff from the stock+ Pay off from

the put option

Page 17: Options and obligations

Pay off diagrams

• + =

Buy Buy synthetic callStock Put

Page 18: Options and obligations

Synthetic put /Protective Call /Synthetic Long put /Synthetic Short

• Short on a stock • Buy the call either A-T-M or O-T-M• In case the price falls he will gain out of the price fall • If any unexpected price –loss is limited • Pay off the long call compensates the loss out of the

stock short position • Bearish and to protect from the unexpected price

increase

Page 19: Options and obligations

Synthetic put /Protective Call /Synthetic Long put /Synthetic Short

• The expectation of the investor is – prices will go down but against the price rise

• Risk: call strike price –stock price +premium• Reward : Maximum stock price-call option pay off • Maximum is Comparision of Stock price and

Stock sold at • Breakeven Stock price –call premium

Page 20: Options and obligations

Synthetic put /Protective Call /Synthetic Long put /Synthetic Short

• Example ABC ltd is trading at Rs.4457 in June . An investor Mr.A buys a Rs.4500 call for Rs100 while shorting the stock at Rs.4457

Page 21: Options and obligations

Synthetic put /Protective Call /Synthetic Long put /Synthetic Short

+ =

• Sell Stock Buy call Synthetic short

Page 22: Options and obligations

Covered call –owning the stock and sell call

• When to use:usually adopted by the investor owns who is neutral to moderately bullish about the stock

• But bearish in the near term • The target price at which he wants exit- strike

price and should O-T-M• Investor earns premium from the buyer of call

option –at or below the strike price

Page 23: Options and obligations

Covered call –buy stock + Sell call

• Example :Mr A bought XYZ Ltd for Rs.3850 and simultaneously sells a call at a strike price of Rs.4000. The price of XYZ ltd stays at or below Rs.4000 . The call buyer will not exercise the call option Mr.A will keep the premium of Rs.80 . Mr A bought XYZ ltd for Rs.3850 and the call option .If the stock moved between Rs.3850 to 3950 Profit is ?

• The price of stock moves to Rs.4100