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F303 Intermediate Investments

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The straddle is appropriate when the investor expects a large move in the stock ... The Straddle. Stock Price. Profit. Buy a Call. Buy a Put. 24. The Butterfly Spread ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: F303 Intermediate Investments


1
F303 Intermediate Investments
  • Class 18, Oct 30
  • Options and Put-Call Parity
  • Andrey Ukhov
  • Kelley School of Business
  • Indiana University

2
Outline of This Subject
  • Profits from options.
  • Different types of options.
  • Factors affecting option prices.
  • Put-call parity.
  • Option trading strategies.

3
Profits from Buying a Call
Profit
X
0
Stock Price
Premium
4
Profits From Writing a Call
Profit
Premium
0
X
Stock Price
5
Profits From Buying a Put
Profit
0
X
Stock Price
6
Profits From Writing a Put
Profit
0
X
Stock Price
7
Types of Options
  • American options can be exercised at any time up
    to the expiration date.
  • European options can only be exercised on the
    expiration date.
  • Most of the options that are traded on exchanges
    are American options. However, European options
    are generally easier to analyze than American
    options.

8
Factors Affecting Option Prices
  • We have six factors that influence the price of a
    stock option
  • The current security price
  • The exercise price
  • Time to maturity
  • Volatility of the underlying assets price
  • Risk-free interest rate
  • Dividends expected during life of the option

9
Stock Price and Strike Price
  • Remember the payoff of a call
  • Maximum 0, S-X
  • This means that a call becomes more valuable as
    the stock price increases and less valuable as
    the exercise price increases.
  • Put options will behave in the opposite waythey
    become less valuable as the stock price increases
    and more valuable as the exercise price increases.

10
Time to Maturity
  • American put and call options become more
    valuable as the time to expiration increases.
  • Consider two identical options except for their
    time to maturity (a) one has a short term
    maturity, and (b) the other has a longer term to
    maturity.
  • The owner of the long-life option has many more
    exercise opportunities open to him/her than the
    owner of the short term option.
  • A longer time to maturity is like a form of
    insurance

11
Volatility of the Underlying Asset
  • As the volatility of the underlying asset
    increases, the chances that the stock will do
    very badly or very well increase.
  • For the owner of a call or put, this is good
    news. The call owner will benefit from price
    increases but has limited downside risk
  • The owner of a put benefits from price decreases
    but has limited downside risk

12
Risk-free Interest Rate
  • To understand this effect, you must assume that
    all other variables remain fixed when interest
    rates change.
  • Consider a rise in interest rates. In this case,
    you have (a) a rise in the expected growth rate
    of the stock price, and (b) a decline in the
    present value of the future cash flows received
    by the option holder.
  • In the case of puts these two effects decrease
    the value of puts
  • In the case of calls value of calls increase.

13
The Six Factors
14
Call Exercise
  • Does it make sense to exercise an American call
    option on a non-dividend stock early?
  • No!!
  • A call provides a kind of insurance. A call
    option, when held instead of the stock itself, in
    effect insures the holder against the stock price
    falling below the exercise price.
  • Once the option has been exercised and the
    exercise price has been exchanged for the stock
    price, this insurance disappears.

15
Put Exercise
  • Does it make sense to exercise an American put
    option on a non-dividend stock early?
  • Yes, but only if it is sufficiently deep in the
    money!!
  • A put option also provides a kind of insurance.
    But, the investor may, in certain circumstances,
    forgo this insurance and exercise early in order
    to realize the strike price immediately.
  • The early exercise of a put option becomes more
    attractive as (a) the security price decreases,
    (b) risk-free rate increases and (c) volatility
    decreases.

16
Put-Call Parity
  • We can obtain an important relationship between
    the prices of calls and puts. This relationship
    will allow us to price a call or put, and see
    whether there are arbitrage opportunities.
  • The relationship is given by
  • Call P.V. of Exercise Price Put Security
    Price

17
Put-Call Parity
  • Where does the put-call parity come from?
  • Consider two portfolios
  • Portfolio A One European call option plus an
    amount of cash equal to Present Value of X
  • Portfolio B One European put option plus one
    share.
  • If these two portfolios produce the same pay-offs
    under all states of nature, then they should have
    the same price.

18
Put-Call Parity
19
Put-Call Parity An Example
  • If the Put-Call Parity does not hold, then
    arbitrage opportunities will arise.
  • Example Suppose that the security price is 31,
    the exercise price is 30, the risk-free rate is
    10 per annum, the price of a 3-month European
    call option is 3, and the price of a 3-month
    European put option is 2.25.
  • Do we have mispricing?
  • If yes, could we make arbitrage profits?

20
Put-Call Parity An Example
  • Value of Portfolio A
  • Value of Portfolio B
  • Portfolio B is overpriced relative to portfolio
    A.
  • What is the arbitrage strategy?
  • Buy securities in Portfolio A and short the
    securities in Portfolio B.

21
Trading Strategies With Options
  • Options can be used with a position in the stock
    to form specific payoffs.
  • Example 1 Long position in the stock and short
    position in a call
  • Example 2 Short position in the stock and a long
    position in a call.
  • Options can also be combined together to create a
    wide range of different payoff functions.

22
The Straddle
  • One possible combination is a straddle.
  • How to create a straddle?
  • Buy a call and put options on the same stock with
    the same exercise price and expiration date.
  • The straddle is appropriate when the investor
    expects a large move in the stock price but is
    unsure in which direction the price will move.

23
The Straddle
Profit
Buy a Put
Buy a Call
Stock Price
24
The Butterfly Spread
  • Another possible combination is a butterfly
    spread.
  • How to create a butterfly spread?
  • Buying a call option with a relatively low
    strike price, X1
  • Buying a call option with a relatively high
    strike price, X3
  • Selling two call options with a strike price,
    X2, halfway between X1 and X3.

25
The Butterfly Spread
Profit
Selling two call options at X2
Net Payoff
Stock Price
X1
X2
X3
Buy 1 call at X3
Buy 1 call at X1
26
Key Points to Remember
  • Profit diagrams from Call and Put options.
  • Factors affecting option prices.
  • Put-call parity formula.
  • The uses of put-call parity.
  • Option trading strategies.
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