Options on stock indices, currencies, and futures

About This Presentation
Title:

Options on stock indices, currencies, and futures

Description:

The stock starts at price S0e qT and pays no dividends ... the size of up movements, u, the parameter determining the size of down movements, d ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:44
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 53
Provided by: faculty80

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Options on stock indices, currencies, and futures


1
Options on stock indices, currencies, and futures
2
Options On Stock Indices
  • Contracts are on 100 times index they are
    settled in cash
  • On exercise of the option ,the holder of a call
    option receives (S-K)100 in cash and the writer
    of the option pays this amount in cash the
    holder of a put option receives
  • (K-S)100 in cash and the writer of the option
    pays this amount in cash
  • S the value of the index
  • K the strike price

3
The most popular underlying indices in the U.S.
  • The Dow Jones Index (DJX)
  • The Nasdaq 100 Index (NDX)
  • The Russell 2000 Index (RUT)
  • The SP 100 Index (OEX)
  • The SP 500 Index (SPX)

4
LEAPS
  • Leaps are options on stock indices that last up
    to 3 years
  • They have December expiration dates
  • Leaps also trade on some individual stocks ,they
    have January expiration dates

5
Portfolio Insurance
  • Consider a manager in charge of a
    well-diversified portfolio whose b is 1.0
  • The dividend yield from the portfolio is the same
    as the dividend yield from the index
  • The percentage changes in the value of the
    portfolio can be expected to be approximately the
    same as the percentage changes in the value of
    the index

6
Portfolio InsuranceExample
  • Portfolio has a b of 1.0
  • It is currently worth 500,000
  • The index currently stands at 1000
  • What trade is necessary to provide insurance
    against the portfolio value falling below
    450,000?

7
Portfolio InsuranceExample
  • Buy 5 three-month put option contracts on the
    index with a strike price of 900
  • The index drops to 880 in three months
  • the portfolio is worth about
  • 5880100 440,000
  • the payoff from the options
  • 5(900-880)100 10,000
  • total value of the portfolio
  • 440,00010,000 450,000

8
When the portfolio beta is not 1.0Example
  • Portfolio has a beta of 2.0
  • It is currently worth 500,000 and index stands
    at 1000
  • The risk-free rate is 12 per annum
  • The dividend yield on both the portfolio and the
    index is 4
  • How many put option contracts should be purchased
    for portfolio insurance?

9
When the portfolio beta is not 1.0Example
  • Value of index in three months
    1040
  • Return from change in index
    40/10004
  • Dividends from index
    0.2541
  • Total return from index
    415
  • Risk-free interest rate
    0.25123
  • Excess return from index
    5-32
  • Expected excess return from portfolio
    224
  • Expected return from portfolio
    347
  • Dividends from portfolio
    0.2541
  • Expected increase in value of portfolio
    7-16
  • Expected value of portfolio
    500,0001.06 530,000

10
Relationship between value of index and value of
portfolio for beta 2.0
The correct strike price for the 10 put option
contracts that are purchased is 960
11
Currency Options
  • Currency options trade on the Philadelphia
    Exchange (PHLX)
  • There also exists an active over-the-counter
    (OTC) market
  • Currency options are used by corporations to buy
    insurance when they have an FX exposure

12
Currency options Example
  • An example of a European call option
  • Buy 1,000,000 euros with USD at an exchange
    rate of 1.2000 USD per euro ,if the exchange rate
    at the maturity of the option is 1.2500 ,the
    payoff is
  • 1,000,000(1.2500-1.2000) 50,000

13
Currency options Example
  • An example of a European put option
  • Sell 10,000,000 Australian for USD at an
    exchange rate of 0.7000 USD per Australian ,if
    the exchange rate at the maturity of the option
    is 0.6700 ,the payoff is
  • 10,000,000(0.7000-0.6700) 300,000

14
Range forwardsShort range-forward contract
  • Buy a European put option with a strike price of
    K1 and sell a European call option with a strike
    price of K2

15
Range forwardsLong range-forward contract
  • Sell a European put option with a strike price of
    K1 and buy a European call option with a strike
    price of K2

16
Options On Stocks Paying Known Dividend
Yields
  • Dividends cause stock prices to reduce on the
    ex-dividend date by the amount of the dividend
    payment
  • The payment of a dividend yield at rate q
    therefore cause the growth rate in the stock
    price to be less than it would otherwise be by an
    amount q
  • With a dividend yield of q ,the stock price grow
    from S0 today to ST
  • Without dividends it would grow from S0 today to
  • STeqT
  • Alternatively ,without dividends it would grow
    from S0eqT today to ST

17
European Options on StocksProviding a Dividend
Yield
  • We get the same probability distribution for the
    stock price at time T in each of the following
    cases
  • The stock starts at price S0 and provides a
    dividend yield at rate q
  • The stock starts at price S0eqT and pays no
    dividends
  • We can value European options by reducing the
    stock price to S0eqT and then behaving as
    though there is no dividend

18
Put-call parity
  • Put-call parity for an option on a stock paying a
    dividend yield at rate q
  • For American options, the put-call parity
    relationship is

19
Pricing Formulas
  • By replacing S0 by S0eqT in Black-Sholes
    formulas ,we obtain that

20
Risk-neutral valuation
  • In a risk-neutral world ,the total return must be
    r ,the dividends provide a return of q ,the
    expected growth rate in the stock price must be r
    q
  • The risk-neutral process for the stock price

21
Risk-neutral valuation continued
  • The expected growth rate in the stock price is
  • r q ,the expected stock price at time T is
    S0e(r-q)T
  • Expected payoff for a call option in a
    risk-neutral world as
  • Where d1 and d2 are defined as above
  • Discounting at rate r for the T

22
Valuation of European Stock Index Options
  • We can use the formula for an option on a stock
    paying a dividend yield
  • S0 the value of index
  • q average dividend yield
  • the volatility of the index

23
Example
  • A European call option on the SP 500 that is two
    months from maturity
  • S0 930, K 900, r 0.08
  • 0.2, T 2/12
  • Dividend yields of 0.2 and 0.3 are expected in
    the first month and the second month

24
Example continued
  • The total dividend yield per annum is
  • q (0.2 0.3)6 3
  • one contract would cost 5,183

25
Forward price
  • Define F0 as the forward price of the index

26
Implied dividend yields
  • By

27
Valuation of European Currency Options
  • A foreign currency is analogous to a stock paying
    a known dividend yield
  • The owner of foreign receives a yield equal to
    the risk-free interest rate, rf
  • With q replaced by rf , we can get call price, c,
    and put price, p

28
Using forward exchange rates
  • Define F0 as the forward foreign exchange rate

29
American Options
  • The parameter determining the size of up
    movements, u, the parameter determining the size
    of down movements, d
  • The probability of an up movement is
  • In the case of options on an index
  • In the case of options on a currency

30
Nature of Futures Options
  • A call futures is the right to enter into a long
    futures contracts at a certain price.
  • A put futures is the right to enter into a short
    futures contracts at a certain price.
  • Most are American Be exercised any time during
    the life .

30
31
Nature of Futures Options
  • When a call futures option is exercised the
    holder acquires
  • If the futures position is closed out
    immediately
  • Payoff from call F0 K
  • where F0 is futures price at time of exercise
  • 1. A long position in the futures
  • 2. A cash amount equal to the excess of
  • the futures price over the strike price

31
32
Example
  • Today is 8/15, One September futures call option
    on copper,K240(cents/pound), One contract is on
    25,000 pounds of copper.
  • Futures price for delivery in Sep is currently
    251cents
  • 8/14 (the last settlement) futures price is 250
  • IF option exercised, investor receive cash
  • 25,000X(250-240)cents2,500
  • Plus a long futures, if it closed out
    immediately
  • 25,000X(251-250)cents250
  • If the futures position is closed out immediately
  • 25,000X (251-240)cents2,750

32
33
Nature of Futures Options
  • When a put futures option is exercised the
    holder acquires
  • If the futures position is closed out
    immediately
  • Payoff from put KF0
  • where F0 is futures price at time of exercise

1. A short position in the futures 2. A
cash amount equal to the excess of the strike
price over the futures price
33
34
Reasons for the popularity on futures option
  • Liquid and easier to trade
  • From futures exchange, price is known
    immediately.
  • Normally settled in cash
  • Futures and futures options are traded in the
    same exchange.
  • Lower cost than spot options

34
35
European spot and futures options
  • Payoff from call option with strike price K on
    spot price of an asset
  • Payoff from call option with strike price K on
    futures price of an asset
  • When futures contracts matures at the same time
    as the option

35
36
Put-Call Parity for futures options
  • Consider the following two portfolios
  • A. European call plus Ke-rT of cash
  • B. European put plus long futures plus cash
    equal to F0e-rT
  • They must be worth the same at time T so that

cKe-rTpF0 e-rT
36
37
Example
European call option on spot silver for delivery
in six month
Use equation
cKe-rTpF0 e-rT
?PcKe-rT-F0 e-rT
P0.568.50e-0.1X0.5-8 e-0.1X0.5
1.04
37
38
Bounds for futures options
cKe-rTpF0 e-rT
By
or
Similarly
or
38
39
Bounds for futures options
Because American futures can be exercised at
any time, we must have
39
40
Valuation by Binomial trees
A 1-month call option on futures has a strike
price of 29.
40
41
Valuation by Binomial trees
  • Consider the Portfolio long D
    futures short 1 call option
  • Portfolio is riskless when 3D 4 -2D or
    D 0.8

41
42
Valuation by Binomial trees
  • The riskless portfolio is
  • long 0.8 futures
  • short 1 call option
  • The value of the portfolio in 1 month
  • is -1.6
  • The value of the portfolio today is
  • -1.6e 0.06/12 -1.592

42
43
A Generalization
  • A derivative lasts for time T and
  • is dependent on a futures price

F0u ƒu
F0 ƒ
F0d ƒd
43
44
A Generalization
  • Consider the portfolio that is long ? futures
    and short 1 derivative
  • The portfolio is riskless when

F0u D - F0 D ƒu
F0d D- F0D ƒd
44
45
A Generalization
  • Value of the portfolio at time T is F0u ? F0 ?
    ƒu
  • Value of portfolio today is ƒ
  • Hence ƒ F0u ? F0 ? ƒue-rT

45
46
A Generalization
  • Substituting for ? we obtain
  • ƒ p ƒu (1 p )ƒd erT
  • where

46
47
Drift of a futures price in a risk-neutral word
  • Valuing European Futures Options
  • We can use the formula for an option on a stock
    paying a dividend yield
  • Set S0 current futures price (F0)
  • Set q domestic risk-free rate (r )
  • Setting q r ensures that the expected growth
    of F in a risk-neutral world is zero

47
48
Growth Rates For Futures Prices
  • A futures contract requires no initial investment
  • In a risk-neutral world the expected return
    should be zero
  • The expected growth rate of the futures price is
    therefore zero
  • The futures price can therefore be treated like a
    stock paying a dividend yield of r

48
49
Results
49
50
Blacks Formula
  • The formulas for European options on futures are
    known as Blacks formulas

50
51
Example
  • European put futures option on crude oil,
  • Fo20,K20, r0.09,T4/12,s0.25,ln(F0K)0,
  • So that

51
52
American futures options vs spot options
  • If futures prices are higher than spot prices
    (normal market), an American call on futures is
    worth more than a similar American call on spot.
    An American put on futures is worth less than a
    similar American put on spot
  • When futures prices are lower than spot prices
    (inverted market) the reverse is true

52
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)