Title: Options : A Primer
1Options A Primer
2Introduction
- An option contract gives its owner the right,
but not the legal obligation, to conduct a
transaction involving an underlying asset at a
predetermined future date (the exercise date) and
at a predetermined price (the exercise or strike
price). - An option gives the option buyer the right to
decide whether or not the trade will eventually
take place. - The seller of the option has the obligation to
perform if the buyer exercises the option. - To acquire these rights, owner of the option must
pay a price called the option premium to the
seller of the option. -
3Types of options
- American options may be exercised at any time up
to an including the contract's expiration date. - European options can be exercised only on the
contracts expiration date. - If two options are identical (maturity,
underlying stock, strike price, etc.), the value
of the American option will equal or exceed the
value of the European option. - The owner of a call option has the right to
purchase the underlying asset at a specific price
for a specified time period. - The owner of a put option has the right to sell
the underlying asset at a specific price for a
specified time period.
4In the money, Out of the money
-
- If immediate exercise of the option would
generate a positive payoff, it is in the money. - If immediate exercise would result in a loss
(negative payoff), it is out of the money. - When the current asset price equals the exercise
price, exercise will generate neither a gain nor
loss, and the option is at the money. -
5In the money call options
- If S X 0, a call option is in the money.
- S X is the amount of the payoff a call holder
would receive from immediate exercise, buying a
share for X and selling it in the market for a
great price S. - If S X
- If S X, a call option is said to be at the
money.
6In the money put options
- If X S 0, a put option is in the money.
- X S is the amount of the payoff from immediate
exercise, buying a share for S and exercising the
put to receive X for the share. - If X S
- If S X, a put option is said to be at the
money.
7Intrinsic value
- An options intrinsic value is the amount by
which the option is in-the-money. - It is the amount that the option owner would
receive if the option were exercised. - An option has zero intrinsic value if it is at
the money or out of the money, regardless of
whether it is a call or a put option. - The intrinsic value of a call option is the
greater of (S-X) or 0. That is C Max0, S
X - Similarly, the intrinsic value of a put is (X
S) or 0, whichever is greater. That is - P Max0, X S
8Problem
A call option has an exercise price of 40 and the
underlying stock is trading at 37. What is the
intrinsic value?
Solution If we exercise the option, loss 3 The
stock is 3 out of the money. So it does not have
any intrinsic value.
9Problem
A put option has an exercise price of 40 and the
underlying stock is trading at 37. What is the
intrinsic value?
Solution I can buy from the market at 37 and sell
to the option writer for 40. So the intrinsic
value is 3.
10Problem
I own a call option on the SP 500 with an
exercise price of 900. During expiration, the
index was trading at 912. If the multiplier is
250, what is the profit I make?
Solution Notionally I can buy at 900 and sell at
912. Profit (912 900) (250) 3000
11Problem
Calculate the lowest possible price for an
American put option with a strike price of 65, if
the stock is trading at 63 and the risk free rate
is 5. The expiration of the option is after 4
months.
Solution The minimum price 65 63 2.
Otherwise risk free profits can be made by
arbitraging.
12Problem
Repeat the earlier problem if it is a European
Put.
Solution Present value of strike price
65/(1.05)0.33 . 63.96 So pay off 63.96
63 .96
13Problem
A 35 call on a stock trading at 38 is priced at
5. What is the time value?
Solution Intrinsic value 38 35 3 Total
value 5 Time value 5 3 2
14Problem
A call option with exercise price 40, has a
premium of 3. What is the pay off if the stock
price 38, 40, 42, 44?
Solution Stock Price Pay
off 38 -3 40 -3 42 -3 (42 40) -
1 44 -3 (44 40) 1
15Problem
A put option with exercise price 40 has a premium
of 3. What is the pay off if the stock price
38, 40, 42, 44?
Solution Stock Price Pay off 38 -3
(40 38) - 1 40 -3 42 -3 44 -3
16A put option with exercise price 40 has a premium
of 3. What is the pay off if the stock price
38, 40, 42, 44?
Solution
-3 (40-38) -1
17Problem
Suppose you have bought a 40 call and a 40 put
each with premium of 3. What is the pay off is
the stock price 36, 38, 40, 42, 44?
Solution Stock Price Pay off 36 -3
(40 36) - 3 - 2 38 -3 (40 38)
3 - 4 40 -3 3 - 6 42 -3
3 (42 - 40) - 4 44 -3 3 (44 40)
-2
18Suppose you have bought a 40 call and a 40 put
each with premium of 3. What is the pay off is
stock price 36, 38, 40, 42, 44?
Solution
-3 (40-38)-3 - 2
-3-3 (33-40) -2
-3 (40-38)-3 - 4
-3-3 (42-40) - 4
- 3 - 3 - 6
19Problem
A trader adopts a combination of the following
strategies a) Purchase of call option Strike
price 1.40/Euro Premium 0.32 b) Sale
of call option Strike price
1.60/Euro Premium 0.28 Determine the pay
off.
20Solution
a) Spot price exercised. Pay off - .32 .28 - .04 b)
1.40 will be exercised Pay off - .04 S 1.40 S
1.44 C) Spot price 1.60 Both options will
be exercised Pay off - .04 S 1.40
(S-1.60) - .04 S 1.40 S 1.60 .16
21Problem
A trader buys the following options
simultaneously construct the pay off table. Put
option Strike price 1.71 premium 0.10 Call
option Strike price 1.75 premium 0.05
22Solution
Spot price 1.71, only put option is
exercised Pay off - 0.10 0.05 1.71
S 1.56 S 1.71 spot price 1.75 no option
is exercised pay off - 0 .15 Spot price
1.75 , only call option is exercised pay off
- 0.15 S 1.75 S 1.90
23Problem
A stock trades at 108 and there are two European
options currently available. Strike
Price Premium Put A 113 4 Put
B 118 10 Explain how
arbitraging can take place.
24Solution
Buy Put A and Sell Put B Certain cash flows 10
4 6 S off (113 S) (118 S) 6 1 113 118 , only Put B is exercised Pay off 6 (118
S) S 112 S 118, neither option is
exercised Pay off 6
25Problem
The following call options are trading Option
Strike Price Premium Put A 113
4 Put B 118 10 Explain how
arbitraging can take place.
Solution Sell B, Buy A S exercised , profit 10 - 4 6 30 S 35 only
A is exercised , profit 6 (S-30) S - 24 S
35 both options are exercised , profit
6(S-30)- (S-35) 11
26Problem
Suppose you bought a put on a stock selling for
60 with a strike price of 55, for a 5 premium.
What is the maximum gain possible?
Solution Maximum gain - 5 (55-0)
27Problem
I write a covered call on a 40 stock with an
exercise price of 50 for a premium of 2. what
will be my maximum gain?
Solution Covered call means writing a call and
buying the stock. Premium received 2 Cash paid
for buying stock 40 Maximum gain will be when
the option is not exercised and the stock price
reaches 50. Then stock can be sold for 50 40
10 So Maximum gain 10 2 12
28Problem
What will be the maximum loss in the previous
problem?
Solution If stock price falls to zero, pay off
2 0 2 Cash paid for buying stock
40 Maximum loss 2 40 - 38
29Specialised options
- Bond options are most often based on Treasury
bonds because of their active trading. - Index options settle in cash, nothing is
delivered, and the payoff is made directly to the
option holders account. - Options on futures sometimes called futures
options, give the holder the right to buy or sell
a specified futures contract on or before a given
date at a given futures rice, the strike price. - Call options on futures contracts give the
holder the right to enter into the long side of a
future contract at a given futures price. - Put options on futures contracts give the
holder the option to take on a short futures
position at a future price equal to the strike
price.
30Interest rate options
- Interest rate options are similar to stock
options except that the exercise price is an
interest rate and the underlying asset is a
reference a rate such as LIBOR. - Interest rate options are also similar to FRAs .
- They are settled in cash, in an amount that is
based on a notional amount and the spread between
the strike a rate and the reference rate. - Most interest options are European options.
-
31- Consider a long position in a LIBOR-based
interest rate call option with a notional amount
of 1,000,000 and a strike rate of 5. - If at expiration, LIBOR is greater than 5, the
option can be exercised and the owner will
receive 1,000,000 x (LIBOR 5). - If LIBOR is less than , the option expires
worthless and the owner receives nothing.
32- Lets consider a LIBOR-based interest rate put
option with the same features as the call that we
just discussed. - Assume the option has a strike rate of 5 and
notional amount of 1,000,000. - If at expiration, LIBOR falls below 5 the
option writer (short) must pay the put holder an
amount equal to 1,000,000 x (5 - LIBOR). - If at expiration, LIBOR is greater than 5, the
option expires worthless and the put writer makes
no payments. -
33Problem
I have bought a call option on 90 day LIBOR with
a notional principal of 2 million and a strike
rate of 4. At the expiration of the option, if
LIBOR is 5, what is the compensation I will
receive?
Solution (2,000,000) (.05 - .04) (90/360)
5000 This compensation will be received 90
days after expiration.
34Caps
- An interest rate cap is a series of interest
rate call options, having expiration dates that
correspond to the reset dates on a floating-rate
loan. - Caps are often used to protect a floating-rate
borrower from an increase in interest rates. - Caps place a maximum (upper limit) on the
interest payments on a floating-rate loan. - A cap may be structured to cover a certain number
of periods or for the entire life of a loan. - The cap will make a payment at any future
interest payment due date whenever the reference
rate exceeds the cap rate.
35Floors
- An interest rate floor is a series of interest
rate put options, having expiration dates that
correspond to the reset dates on a floating-rate
loan. - Floors are often used to protect a floating-rate
lender from a decline in interest rates. - Floors place a minimum (lower limit) on the
interest payments that are received from a
floating-rate loan. -
36Collars
- An interest rate collar combines a cap and a
floor. - A borrower with a floating-rate loan may buy a
cap for protection against rates above the cap
and sell a floor in order to defray some of the
cost of the cap. -
37Call Option value
- Lower bound. Theoretically, no option will sell
for less than its intrinsic value and no option
can take on a negative value. - This means that the lower bound for any option is
zero for both American and European options. - Upper bound. The maximum value of either an
American or a European call option at any time t
is the time-t share price of the underlying
stock. - This makes sense because no one would pay a price
for the right to buy an asset that exceeded the
assets value. It would be cheaper to simply buy
the underlying asset. -
38Put Option value bounds
- Upper bound for put options. The price for an
American put option cannot be more than its
strike price. - This is the exercise value in the event the
underlying stock price goes to zero. - However, since European puts cannot be exercised
prior to expiration, the maximum value is the
present value of the exercise price discounted at
the risk-free rate. - Even if the stock price goes to zero, and is
expected to stay at zero, the intrinsic value, X,
will not be received until the expiration date.
39Valuing call options
- For a European call option, construct the
following portfolio - A long at-the money European call option with
exercise price X, expiring at time t T - A long discount bond priced to yield the
risk-free rate that pays X at option expiration. - A short position in one share of the underlying
stock priced at S0 X - The current value of this portfolio is c0 S0
X/(1RFR)T
40- At expiration time, t T, this portfolio will
pay cT ST X. - That is, we will collect cT Max0, ST X) on
the call option, pay ST to cover our short stock
position, and collect X from the maturing bond. - If ST X, the call is in-the-money, and the
portfolio will have a zero payoff because the
call pays ST X, the bond pays X, and we pay
ST to cover our short position. - That is, the time t T payoff is ST X X
ST 0. - If X ST the call is out-of-the-money, and the
portfolio has a positive payoff equal to X ST
because the call value, cT is zero, we collect X
on the bond, a pay - ST to cover the short
position. - So, the time t T payoff is 0 X ST X - ST
41- Note that no matter whether the option expires
in-the-money, at-the-money, or out-of-the-money,
the portfolio value will be equal to or greater
than zero. We will never have to make a
payment. - To prevent arbitrage, any portfolio that has no
possibility of a negative payoff cannot have a
negative value. Thus, we can state the value of
the portfolio at time t 0 as - c0 S0 X / (1RFR)T 0
- Which allows us to conduct that c0 S0
X/(1RFR)T -
42- Given two puts that are identical in all
respects except exercise price, the one with the
higher exercise price will have at least as much
value as the one with the lower exercise price. - This is because the underlying stock can be sold
at a higher price. - Similarly, given two calls that are identical in
every respect except exercise price, the one with
the lower exercise price will have at least as
much value as the one with the higher exercise
price. - This is because be underlying stock can be
purchased at a lower price.
43Option value and time to expiration
- For American options and in most cases for
European options, the longer the time to
expiration, the greater the time value and, other
things equal, the greater the options premium
(price). - For far out-of-the-money options, the extra time
may have no effect, but we can say the
longer-term option will be no less valuable that
the shorter-term option. -
44- The case that doesnt fit this pattern is the
European put. - The minimum value of an in-the-money European put
at any time t prior to expiration is X/(1RFR)T-t
St. - While longer time to expiration increases option
value through increased volatility, it decreases
the present value of any option payoff at
expiration. - For this reason, we cannot state positively that
the value of a longer European put will greater
than the value of a shorter-term put.
45- If volatility is high and the discount rate low,
the extra time value will be the dominant factor
and the longer-term put will be more valuable. - Low volatility and high interest rates have the
opposite effect and the value of a longer-term
in-the-money put option can be less than the
value of a shorter-term put option. -
46Put Call Parity
- Our derivation of put-call parity is based on the
payoffs of two portfolio combinations, a
fiduciary call and a protective put. -
47Fiduciary call
- A fiduciary call is a combination of a
pure-discount, riskless bond that pays X at
maturity and a call with exercise price X. - The payoff for a fiduciary call at expiration is
X when the call is out of the money, and X (S
X) S when the call is in the money.
48Protective put
- A protective put is a share of stock together
with a put option on the stock. - The expiration date payoff for a protective put
is (X-S) S X when the put is in the money,
and S when the put is out of the money. - When the put is the money, the call is out of
the money, both portfolios pay X at expiration. - Similarly, when the put is out of the money and
the call is in the money, both portfolios pay S
at expiration. -
49- If exercised, an American call will pay St X,
which is less than its minimum value of St
X/(1RFR)T-t. Thus, there is no reason for early
exercise of an American call option on stocks
with no dividends. - For American call options on dividend-paying
stocks, the argument presented above against
early exercise does not necessarily apply. - Keeping in mind that options are not typically
adjusted for dividends, it may be advantageous to
exercise an American call prior to the stock's
ex-dividend date, particularly if the dividend is
expected to significantly decrease the price of
the stock. - For American put options, early exercise may be
warranted if the company that issued the
underlying stock is in bankruptcy so that its
stock price is zero. - It is better to get X now than at expiration.
- Similarly, a very low stock price might also
make an American put worth more dead than alive.
50Volatility and option value
- Greater volatility in the value of an asset or
interest rate underlying an option contract
increases the values of both puts and calls (and
caps and floors). - The reason is that options are one-sided."
- Since an options value falls no lower than zero
when it expires out of the money, the increased
upside potential (with no greater downside risk)
from increased volatility, increases the options
value.
51Problem
A stock is selling at 40, 3 month 50 put is
selling for 11, a 3 month 50 is selling 1.
The risk free rate is 6. How much can be made
on arbitrage.
Solution Portfolio 1 Fiduciary call Buy Call,
Invest in Bond Investment 1 50/(1.06).25
50.28 Portfolio 2 Protective put Buy
stock, Buy put Investment 40 11 51 So
profit from arbitrage 51 50.28 0.72
52Problem
The current stock price is 52 and the risk free
rate is i5. A 3month 50 put is quoting at
1.50. Estimate the price for a 3 month 50 call.
Solution Fiduciary call C 50 /
(1.05).25 Protective put 52 1.5 To prevent
arbitrage, we write C 50/(1.05).25 52
1.5 Or C 53.5 40.39 4.11
53Problem
The current stock price is 53 and the risk free
rate is 5. A 3 month European 50 call is
quoting 3. What is the price of a 3 month 50
put?
Solution To prevent arbitrage, we write C
50/(1.05).25 53 P Or P 53 3 -
49.39 0.61
54Options trading in India
- NSE introduced trading in index options on June
4, 2001. - The options contracts are European style and cash
settled and are based on the popular market
benchmark SP CNX Nifty index. - SP CNX Nifty options contracts have 3
consecutive monthly contracts, additionally 3
quarterly months of the cycle March / June /
September / December and 5 following semi-annual
months of the cycle June / December would be
available, so that at any point in time there
would be options contracts with at least 3 year
tenure available.
55- On expiry of the near month contract, new
contracts (monthly/quarterly/ half yearly
contracts as applicable) are introduced at new
strike prices for both call and put options, on
the trading day following the expiry of the near
month contract. - SP CNX Nifty options contracts expire on the
last Thursday of the expiry month. - If the last Thursday is a trading holiday, the
contracts expire on the previous trading day.
56- New contracts with new strike prices for existing
expiration date are introduced for trading on the
next working day based on the previous day's
index close values, as and when required. - In order to decide upon the at-the-money strike
price, the index closing value is rounded off to
the nearest applicable strike interval. - The in-the-money strike price and the
out-of-the-money strike price are based on the
at-the-money strike price. - The value of the option contracts on Nifty may
not be less than Rs. 2 lakhs at the time of
introduction.
57- The permitted lot size for futures contracts
options contracts shall be the same for a given
underlying or such lot size as may be stipulated
by the Exchange from time to time. - The price step in respect of SP CNX Nifty
options contracts is Re.0.05. - Base price of the options contracts, on
introduction of new contracts, would be the
theoretical value of the options contract arrived
at based on Black-Scholes model of calculation of
options premiums.
58- The base price of the contracts on subsequent
trading days, will be the daily close price of
the options contracts. The closing price shall be
calculated as follows - If the contract is traded in the last half an
hour, the closing price shall be the last half an
hour weighted average price. - If the contract is not traded in the last half an
hour, but traded during any time of the day, then
the closing price will be the last traded price
(LTP) of the contract. - If the contract is not traded for the day, the
base price of the contract for the next trading
day is arrived at based on Black-Scholes model of
calculation of options premiums.