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Financial Information Management Options Stefano Grazioli
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Critical Thinking Financial Engineering = Financial analytics Lab Easy meter
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You do the talking Name, Major Objectives from the class Things you like about the class Things that can be improved Attitude towards the Tournament
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Financial Information Management Options An introduction (spans two lectures)
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Risk
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Managing Risk Auditing Disaster planning Insurance Risk Mitigation Diversification Business continuity Hedging & Options
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Option is a contract giving the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or sell an underlying asset (for example a stock) at a specific price on or before a specified date Options are derivatives.
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CBOE CBOE trades options on 3,300 securities. More than 50,000 series listed. 1/4 of US option trading Hybrid market: 97% total (68% volume) is electronic Source: CBOE & OCC web site – 2013 - Table includes CBOE + C2 combined Year 2013
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Example Scenario You own 100,000 GOOGLE stocks. @ $1,200 -> $120,000,000. You are pretty happy. But you are also worried. What if the price drops to $1,000? You need some kind of insurance against that. Somebody is willing to commit to buying your GOOGLE stock at $1,200 (if you want), two years from now. But she wants $10 per stock. Now. You decide that it is a good deal. So, you buy 100,000 contracts that give you the choice to sell your stock at the agreed price two years from now. You have bought 100,000 put options.
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Put Options A put option gives to its holder the right to sell the underlying security at a given price on or before a given date. "Insurance" analogy
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Types of Traders Speculators Arbitrageurs Hedgers (us)
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Financial Information Management WINIT What Is New In Technology?
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Another Scenario You are an executive at the Coca Cola Company. You make $1,000,000 a year. You are pretty happy. The Board wants to make sure that you will do your best to keep the price of the CocaCola stock up. Rather than giving you a well-deserved raise, they offer to you a deal. They promise that in three years they will give you the chance to buy 200,000 stocks at $40. Right now the stock is valued at $40. If the company does well, the stock price could go as up as $50. So you think: “In three years I could just get my 200,000 @ $40 and then immediately sell them back to the market for $50....” You conclude that an extra $2,000,000 in your pocket is a good thing. You have been given 200,000 call options.
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Call Options A call option gives to its holder the right to buy the underlying security at a given price on or by a given date "security deposit" analogy
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Nomenclature IBM Stock Price: $185.00 IBM Stock Price: $185.00 underlier “spot” (i.e., market) price Call Option can buy 1 IBM stock @ $180.00 on 5 Mar 2014 Call Option can buy 1 IBM stock @ $180.00 on 5 Mar 2014 Put Option can sell 1 IBM stock @ $190.00 on 18 Apr 2014 Put Option can sell 1 IBM stock @ $190.00 on 18 Apr 2014 strike price expiration: European vs. American option price = premium
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Nomenclature IBM Stock Spot Price: $185.00 IBM Stock Spot Price: $185.00 Call Option can buy 1 IBM stock @ $180.00 today Call Option can buy 1 IBM stock @ $180.00 today Call Option can buy 1 IBM stock @ $185.00 today Call Option can buy 1 IBM stock @ $185.00 today Call Option can buy 1 IBM stock @ $190.00 today Call Option can buy 1 IBM stock @ $190.00 today In the money At the money Out of the money
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Financial Information Management Valuating Options An introduction
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Evaluating Options On expiration day, value is certain and dependent on (= strike – spot) On any other day value is not deterministic, because of uncertainty about the future.
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Put Option: Can sell IBM for $200 Evaluating PUT Options The current value of a Put Option depends on: 1) the current price of the underlier - 2) the strike price + 3) the underlier volatility + 4) the time to expiration + 5) the risk-free interest rate - IBM’s price is $205 NOWEXPIRATIONPAST Bought a put option on IBM for $1 x = $200 a) IBM’s market price is $190 b) IBM’s market price is $210 a) IBM’s market price is $190 b) IBM’s market price is $210 Question: what is the value of the option right now?
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Solving the Option Evaluation Problem
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The Black-Scholes Formulas P = –S[N(–d1)] + Xe -rt [N(–d2)] d1 = {ln(S/X) + (r + 2 /2)t} t d2 = d1 - t P = value of a European put option, S = current spot price, X = option “strike” or “exercise” price, t = time to option expiration (in years), r = riskless rate of interest (per annum), = spot return volatility (per annum), N(z) = probability that a standardized normal variable will be less than z. In Excel, this can be calculated using NORMSDIST(d). Delta for a Call = N(d1) Delta for a Put = N(d1) -1
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NORMSDIST(z) z
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Formulas Example: S = $ 42, X = $40 t = 0.5 r = 0.10 (10% p.a.) s = 0.2 (20% p.a.) Output: d1 = 0.7693 d2 = 0.6278 N(d1) = 0.7791 N(d2) = 0.7349 C = $4.76 and P=$0.81
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BS Assumptions Unlimited borrowing and lending at a constant risk-free interest rate. The stock price follows a geometric Brownian motion with constant drift and volatility. There are no transaction costs. The stock does not pay a dividend. All securities are perfectly divisible (i.e. it is possible to buy any fraction of a share). There are no restrictions on short selling. The model treats only European-style options.
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Black Scholes was so much fun… Let’s do it again!
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Evaluating Call Options The current value of a call Option depends on: 1) the current price of the underlier + 2) the strike price - 3) the underlier volatility + 4) the time to expiration + 5) the risk-free interest rate + CocaCola’s price is $40 NOWEXPIRATION Call Option: Can buy CocaCola for $40 PAST Bought a call option for $2.00, x=40 a) CocaCola’s price is $45 b) CocaCola’s price is $35 a) CocaCola’s price is $45 b) CocaCola’s price is $35 Question: what is the value of the option right now?
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The Black-Scholes Formulas C = S[N(d1)] – Xe -rt [N(d2)] d1 = {ln(S/X) + (r + 2 /2)t} t d2 = d1 - t C = value of a European call option S = current spot price, X = option “strike” or “exercise” price, t = time to option expiration (in years), r = riskless rate of interest (per annum), = spot return volatility (per annum), N(z) = probability that a standardized normal variable will be less than d. In Excel, this can be calculated using NORMSDIST(z). Delta for a Call = N(d1) Delta for a Put = N(d1) -1
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Market Mechanics Market listed: bid & ask Buyer & seller: holder & writer Long & short positions Blocks of 100 – NOT FOR THE TOURNAMENT Option class: defined by the underlier and type Option series: defined by an expiration date & strike example: APPL May Call 290 Expiration: Sat after the 3rd Friday of the month America vs European (TOURNAMENT) Transaction costs: commissions on trading and exercising.
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