15-1. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin 15 Option Valuation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 6 The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model.
Advertisements

Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 16 Option Valuation.
Option Valuation The Black-Scholes-Merton Option Pricing Model
Introduction Greeks help us to measure the risk associated with derivative positions. Greeks also come in handy when we do local valuation of instruments.
Financial Innovation & Product Design II Dr. Helmut Elsinger « Options, Futures and Other Derivatives », John Hull, Chapter 22 BIART Sébastien The Standard.
Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives, 6 th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull The Black-Scholes- Merton Model Chapter 13.
Spreads  A spread is a combination of a put and a call with different exercise prices.  Suppose that an investor buys simultaneously a 3-month put option.
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 6 The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model.
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 6 The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model.
Black-Scholes Pricing cont’d & Beginning Greeks. Black-Scholes cont’d  Through example of JDS Uniphase  Pricing  Historical Volatility  Implied Volatility.
CHAPTER 21 Option Valuation. Intrinsic value - profit that could be made if the option was immediately exercised – Call: stock price - exercise price.
VALUING STOCK OPTIONS HAKAN BASTURK Capital Markets Board of Turkey April 22, 2003.
Black-Scholes Pricing & Related Models. Option Valuation  Black and Scholes  Call Pricing  Put-Call Parity  Variations.
Pricing an Option The Binomial Tree. Review of last class Use of arbitrage pricing: if two portfolios give the same payoff at some future date, then they.
Chapter 5: Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Chapter 5: Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Chapter 14 The Black-Scholes-Merton Model Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives, 8th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull
Pricing Cont’d & Beginning Greeks. Assumptions of the Black- Scholes Model  European exercise style  Markets are efficient  No transaction costs 
1 16 Option Valuation What is an Option Worth? At expiration, an option is worth its intrinsic value. Before expiration, put-call parity allows.
Class 5 Option Contracts. Options n A call option is a contract that gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy the underlying security.
Dr. Hassan Mounir El-SadyChapter 6 1 Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model (BSOPM)
D. M. ChanceAn Introduction to Derivatives and Risk Management, 6th ed.Ch. 5: 1 Chapter 5: Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes Model When I first.
Chapter 5: Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 6 The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model.
Valuing Stock Options:The Black-Scholes Model
Option Pricing Models I. Binomial Model II. Black-Scholes Model (Non-dividend paying European Option) A. Black-Scholes Model is the Limit of the Binomial.
Chapter 15 Option Valuation
Copyright © 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved.1 Chapter 5: Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes Model [O]nce a model has been developed, we.
The Greek Letters.
Advanced Risk Management I Lecture 6 Non-linear portfolios.
Chapter 5: Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
1 Chapter 12 The Black-Scholes Formula. 2 Black-Scholes Formula Call Options: Put Options: where and.
Option Valuation. At expiration, an option is worth its intrinsic value. Before expiration, put-call parity allows us to price options. But,  To calculate.
Session 4– Binomial Model & Black Scholes CORP FINC Spring 2014 Shanghai.
Session 4 – Binomial Model & Black Scholes CORP FINC Shanghai ANS.
The Pricing of Stock Options Using Black- Scholes Chapter 12.
Properties of Stock Options
1 Options Option Basics Option strategies Put-call parity Binomial option pricing Black-Scholes Model.
Essentials of Investments © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Fourth Edition Irwin / McGraw-Hill Bodie Kane Marcus 1 Chapter 16.
INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin CHAPTER 18 Option Valuation.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 16 Option Valuation.
Black Scholes Option Pricing Model Finance (Derivative Securities) 312 Tuesday, 10 October 2006 Readings: Chapter 12.
Valuing Stock Options: The Black- Scholes Model Chapter 11.
Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets, 7th Ed, Ch 13, Copyright © John C. Hull 2010 Valuing Stock Options: The Black-Scholes-Merton Model Chapter.
FINC 5000 week 8 Binomial Model & Black Scholes Spring 2014 Shanghai.
Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes-Merton Model aka Black – Scholes Option Pricing Model (BSOPM)
Option Valuation.
Chapter 22 Principles PrinciplesofCorporateFinance Ninth Edition Valuing Options Slides by Matthew Will Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies,
Session 4– Binomial Model & Black Scholes CORP FINC 5880 SUFE Spring 2014 Shanghai WITH ANSWERS ON CLASS ASSIGNMENTS.
Chapter 21 Principles of Corporate Finance Tenth Edition Valuing Options Slides by Matthew Will McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies,
13.1 Valuing Stock Options : The Black-Scholes-Merton Model Chapter 13.
The Black-Scholes-Merton Model Chapter 13 Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives, 7th International Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull
Chapter 16 Option Valuation.
Chapter 16 Option Valuation Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Valuing Stock Options:The Black-Scholes Model
Session 4 – Binomial Model & Black Scholes CORP FINC 5880 Shanghai MOOC.
Chapter 15 Option Valuation. McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Option Values Intrinsic value – Time value.
Chapter 14 The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Class 20 Financial Management,
The Black- Scholes Formula
CHAPTER 21 Option Valuation Investments Cover image Slides by
Option Pricing Model The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Chapter 18 Valuing Options Principles of Corporate Finance
Option Valuation CHAPTER 15.
The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Chapter 15 The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Valuing Stock Options: The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Chapter Twenty One Option Valuation.
Chapter 15 The Black-Scholes-Merton Model
Valuing Stock Options:The Black-Scholes Model
Presentation transcript:

15-1

Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin 15 Option Valuation

15-3 Option Valuation Our goal in this chapter is to discuss how to calculate stock option prices. We will discuss many details of the very famous Black- Scholes-Merton option pricing model. We will discuss "implied volatility," which is the market’s forward-looking uncertainty gauge.

15-4 Just What is an Option Worth? In truth, this is a very difficult question to answer. At expiration, an option is worth its intrinsic value. Before expiration, put-call parity allows us to price options. But, –To calculate the price of a call, we need to know the put price. –To calculate the price of a put, we need to know the call price. So, what we want to know the value of a call option: –Before expiration, and –Without knowing the price of the put

15-5 The Black-Scholes-Merton Option Pricing Model The Black-Scholes option pricing model allows us to calculate the price of a call option before maturity (and, no put price is needed). –Dates from the early 1970s –Created by Professors Fischer Black and Myron Scholes –Made option pricing much easier—The CBOE was launched soon after the Black-Scholes model appeared. Today, many finance professionals refer to an extended version of the model as the Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model. –To recognize the important theoretical contributions by professor Robert Merton.

15-6 The Black-Scholes-Merton Option Pricing Model The Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model says the value of a stock option is determined by six factors:  S, the current price of the underlying stock  y, the dividend yield of the underlying stock  K, the strike price specified in the option contract  r, the risk-free interest rate over the life of the option contract  T, the time remaining until the option contract expires  , (sigma) which is the price volatility of the underlying stock

15-7 The Black-Scholes-Merton Option Pricing Formula The price of a call option on a single share of common stock is: C = Se –yT N(d 1 ) – Ke –rT N(d 2 ) The price of a put option on a single share of common stock is: P = Ke –rT N(–d 2 ) – Se –yT N(–d 1 ) d 1 and d 2 are calculated using these two formulas:

15-8 Formula Details In the Black-Scholes-Merton formula, three common fuctions are used to price call and put option prices: –e -rt, or exp(-rt), is the natural exponent of the value of –rt (in common terms, it is a discount factor) –ln(S/K) is the natural log of the "moneyness" term, S/K. –N(d1) and N(d2) denotes the standard normal probability for the values of d1 and d2. In addition, the formula makes use of the fact that: N(-d 1 ) = 1 - N(d 1 )

15-9 Example: Computing Prices for Call and Put Options Suppose you are given the following inputs: S = $50 y = 2% K = $45 T = 3 months (or 0.25 years)  = 25% (stock volatility) r = 6% What is the price of a call option and a put option, using the Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing formula?

15-10 We Begin by Calculating d 1 and d 2 Now, we must compute N(d 1 ) and N(d 2 ). That is, the standard normal probabilities.

15-11 We Could Use a Table of Standard Normal Probabilities

15-12 Or, we could use the =NORMSDIST(x) Function in Excel If we use =NORMSDIST( ), we obtain If we use =NORMSDIST( ), we obtain Let’s make use of the fact N(-d 1 ) = 1 - N(d 1 ). N( ) = 1 – N( ) = 1 – = N( ) = 1 – N( ) = 1 – = We now have all the information needed to price the call and the put.

15-13 The Call Price and the Put Price: Call Price = Se –yT N(d 1 ) – Ke –rT N(d 2 ) = $50 x e -(0.02)(0.25) x – 45 x e -(0.06)(0.25) x = 50 x x – 45 x x = $ Put Price = Ke –rT N(–d 2 ) – Se –yT N(–d 1 ) = $45 x e -(0.06)(0.25) x – 50 x e -(0.02)(0.25) x = 45 x x – 50 x x = $0.565.

15-14 We can Verify Our Results Using a Version of Put-Call Parity Note: The options must have European-style exercise.

15-15 Valuing the Options Using Excel

15-16 Valuing Employee Stock Options Companies issuing stock options to employees must report estimates of the value of these ESOs The Black-Scholes-Merton formula is widely used for this purpose. For example, in December 2002, the Coca-Cola Company granted ESOs with a stated life of 15 years. However, to allow for the fact that ESOs are often exercised before maturity, Coca-Cola also used a life of 6 years to value these ESOs.

15-17 Example: Valuing Coca-Cola ESOs Using Excel

15-18 Summary: Coca-Cola Employee Stock Options

15-19 Varying the Option Price Input Values An important goal of this chapter is to show how an option price changes when only one of the six inputs changes. The table below summarizes these effects.

15-20 Varying the Underlying Stock Price Changes in the stock price has a big effect on option prices.

15-21 Varying the Time Remaining Until Option Expiration

15-22 Varying the Volatility of the Stock Price

15-23 Varying the Interest Rate

15-24 Calculating the Impact of Input Changes Option traders must know how changes in input prices affect the value of the options that are in their portfolio. Two inputs have the biggest effect over a time span of a few days: –Changes in the stock price (street name: Delta) –Changes in the volatility of the stock price (street name: Vega)

15-25 Calculating Delta Delta measures the dollar impact of a change in the underlying stock price on the value of a stock option. Call option delta= e –yT N(d 1 ) > 0 Put option delta= –e –yT N(–d 1 ) < 0 A $1 change in the stock price causes an option price to change by approximately delta dollars.

15-26 Example: Calculating Delta

15-27 The "Delta" Prediction: The call delta value of predicts that if the stock price increases by $1, the call option price will increase by $0.83. –If the stock price is $51, the call option value is $6.837—an actual increase of about $0.85. –How well does Delta predict if the stock price changes by $0.25? The put delta value of predicts that if the stock price increases by $1, the put option price will decrease by $0.19. –If the stock price is $51, the put option value is $0.422—an actual decrease of about $0.14. –How well does Delta predict if the stock price changes by $0.25?

15-28 Calculating Vega Vega measures the impact of a change in stock price volatility on the value of stock options. Vega is the same for both call and put options. Vega = Se –yT n(d 1 )  T > 0 n(d) represents a standard normal density, e -d/2 /  2  If the stock price volatility changes by 100% (i.e., from 25% to 125%), option prices increase by about vega.

15-29 Example: Calculating Vega

15-30 The "Vega" Prediction: The vega value of predicts that if the stock price volatility increases by 100% (i.e., from 25% to 125%), call and put option prices will increase by $ Generally, traders divide vega by 100—that way the prediction is: if the stock price volatility increases by 1% (25% to 26%), call and put option prices will both increase by about $ If stock price volatility increases from 25% to 26%, you can use the spreadsheet to see that the –Call option price is now $6.047, an increase of $ –Put option price is now $0.627, an increase of $0.062.

15-31 Other Impacts on Option Prices from Input Changes Gamma measures delta sensitivity to a stock price change. –A $1 stock price change causes delta to change by approximately the amount gamma. Theta measures option price sensitivity to a change in time remaining until option expiration. –A one-day change causes the option price to change by approximately the amount theta. Rho measures option price sensitivity to a change in the interest rate. –A 1% interest rate change causes the option price to change by approximately the amount rho.

15-32 Implied Standard Deviations Of the six input factors for the Black-Scholes-Merton stock option pricing model, only the stock price volatility is not directly observable. A stock price volatility estimated from an option price is called an implied standard deviation (ISD) or implied volatility (IVOL). Calculating an implied volatility requires: –All other input factors, and –Either a call or put option price

15-33 Implied Standard Deviations, Cont. Sigma can be found by trial and error, or by using the following formula. This simple formula yields accurate implied volatility values as long as the stock price is not too far from the strike price of the option contract.

15-34 Example, Calculating an ISD < 1%, not bad!

15-35 CBOE Implied Volatilities for Stock Indexes The CBOE publishes data for two implied volatility indexes: –S&P 100 Index Option Volatility, ticker symbol VIX –Nasdaq 100 Index Option Volatility, ticker symbol VXN Each of these volatility indexes are calculating using ISDs from eight options: –4 calls with two maturity dates: 2 slightly out of the money 2 slightly in the money –4 puts with two maturity dates: 2 slightly out of the money 2 slightly in the money The purpose of these indexes is to give investors information about market volatility in the coming months.

15-36 VIX vs. S&P 100 Index Realized Volatility

15-37 VXN vs. Nasdaq 100 Index Realized Volatility

15-38 Hedging a Portfolio with Index Options Many institutional money managers use stock index options to hedge the equity portfolios they manage. To form an effective hedge, the number of option contracts needed can be calculated with this formula: Note that regular rebalancing is needed to maintain an effective hedge over time. Why? Well, over time: –Underlying Value Changes –Option Delta Changes –Portfolio Value Changes –Portfolio Beta Changes

15-39 Example: Calculating the Number of Option Contracts Needed to Hedge an Equity Portfolio Your $45,000,000 portfolio has a beta of You decide to hedge the value of this portfolio with the purchase of put options. –The put options have a delta of –The value of the index is So, you buy 1,521 put options.

15-40 Implied Volatility Skews Volatility skews (or volatility smiles) describe the relationship between implied volatilities and strike prices for options. –Recall that implied volatility is often used to estimate a stock’s price volatility over the period remaining until option expiration.

15-41 Implied Volatility Skews, Cont.

15-42 Graph of Volatility Skews

15-43 Implied Volatility Skews, Summary Logically, there can be only one stock price volatility, because price volatility is a property of the underlying stock. However, volatility skews do exist. There is widespread agreement that the major cause is stochastic volatility. Stochastic volatility is the phenomenon of stock price volatility changing randomly over time. Recall that the Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model assumes that stock price volatility is constant over the life of the option. Nevertheless, the Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model yields accurate option prices for options with strike prices close to the current stock price.

15-44 Useful Websites (for more information on option formulas) (for a free option price calculator) (for options trading strategies and a lot more on options) (for applications of implied volatility) (for stock option reports) (for free daily volatility summaries)

15-45 Chapter Review, I. The Black-Scholes-Merton Option Pricing Model Valuing Employee Stock Options Varying the Option Price Input Values –Varying the Underlying Stock Price –Varying the Option’s Strike Price –Varying the Time Remaining until Option Expiration –Varying the Volatility of the Stock Price –Varying the Interest Rate –Varying the Dividend Yield

15-46 Chapter Review, II. Measuring the Impact of Input Changes on Option Prices –Interpreting Option Deltas –Interpreting Option Etas –Interpreting Option Vegas –Interpreting an Option’s Gamma, Theta, and Rho Implied Standard Deviations Hedging a Stock Portfolio with Stock Index Options Implied Volatility Skews