Introduction to Financial Engineering

Slides:



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

15-1. Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin 15 Option Valuation.
Introduction Greeks help us to measure the risk associated with derivative positions. Greeks also come in handy when we do local valuation of instruments.
Valuation of Financial Options Ahmad Alanani Canadian Undergraduate Mathematics Conference 2005.
1 The Greek Letters Chapter Goals OTC risk management by option market makers may be problematic due to unique features of the options that are.
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.
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 6 The Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model.
FIN 685: Risk Management Topic 3: Non-Linear Hedging Larry Schrenk, Instructor.
Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets, 8th Ed, Ch 17, Copyright © John C. Hull 2013 The Greek Letters Chapter 13 1.
Greeks Cont’d. Hedging with Options  Greeks (Option Price Sensitivities)  delta, gamma (Stock Price)  theta (time to expiration)  vega (volatility)
Black-Scholes Pricing cont’d & Beginning Greeks. Black-Scholes cont’d  Through example of JDS Uniphase  Pricing  Historical Volatility  Implied Volatility.
Options: Greeks Cont’d. Hedging with Options  Greeks (Option Price Sensitivities)  delta, gamma (Stock Price)  theta (time to expiration)  vega (volatility)
Option Strategies. Definitions In the money An option is in-the-money when there would be profit in exercising it immediately Out of the money Out-of-the-money.
Options: Greeks Cont’d. Hedging with Options  Greeks (Option Price Sensitivities)  delta, gamma (Stock Price)  theta (time to expiration)  vega (volatility)
Greeks Cont’d. Hedging with Options  Greeks (Option Price Sensitivities)  delta, gamma (Stock Price)  theta (time to expiration)  vega (volatility)
© 2002 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 7 Option Greeks.
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 16 Financial Engineering and Risk Management.
Drake DRAKE UNIVERSITY Fin 288 Valuing Options Using Binomial Trees.
Pricing Cont’d & Beginning Greeks. Assumptions of the Black- Scholes Model  European exercise style  Markets are efficient  No transaction costs 
Chapter 121 CHAPTER 12 AN OPTIONS PRIMER In this chapter, we provide an introduction to options. This chapter is organized into the following sections:
The Greek Letters Chapter The Goals of Chapter 17.
Option Pricing Dr. J.D. Han. 2 *Currency Option in Practice USD call/JP Yen put “Face values in dollars = $10,000,000 Option call/put = USD call or JPY.
Introduction to Financial Engineering Aashish Dhakal Week 6: Convertible Bonds.
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.
Introduction to Financial Engineering Aashish Dhakal Week : Bond Risk.
Chapter 15 Option Valuation
1 The Greek Letters Chapter The Greeks are coming! Parameters of SENSITIVITY Delta =  Theta =  Gamma =  Vega =  Rho = 
17:49:46 1 The Greek Letters Chapter :49:46 2 Example A bank has sold for $300,000 a European call option on 100,000 shares of a nondividend paying.
The Greek Letters.
Hedging and Value-at-Risk (VaR) Single asset VaR Delta-VaR for portfolios Delta-Gamma VaR simulated VaR Finance 70520, Spring 2002 Risk Management & Financial.
Computational Finance Lecture 7 The “Greeks”. Agenda Sensitivity Analysis Delta and Delta hedging Other Greeks.
1 Chapter 12 The Black-Scholes Formula. 2 Black-Scholes Formula Call Options: Put Options: where and.
1 Greek Letters for Options MGT 821/ECON 873 Greek Letters for Options.
The Greek Letters Chapter 17
Option Valuation. At expiration, an option is worth its intrinsic value. Before expiration, put-call parity allows us to price options. But,  To calculate.
Derivatives Lecture 21.
Delta Hedging & Greek NeutraL
THE GREEKS  Options prices are always based on market supply and demand.  However predictive models have been developed to measure effect on changes.
Fundamentals of Futures and Options Markets, 5 th Edition, Copyright © John C. Hull The Greek Letters Chapter 15.
Financial Risk Management of Insurance Enterprises Valuing Interest Rate Options.
Volatility Smiles. What is a Volatility Smile? It is the relationship between implied volatility and strike price for options with a certain maturity.
Greeks of the Black Scholes Model. Black-Scholes Model The Black-Scholes formula for valuing a call option where.
Investment and portfolio management MGT 531.  Lecture #31.
The Option Pit Method Option Pit Option Pit Boot Camp The Option Pit Method For trading options.
Warrants On 30 th October Warrants Warrant Types  Warrants are tradable securities which give the holder right, but not the obligation, to buy.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 16 Option Valuation.
Chapter 9 Risk Management of Energy Derivatives Lu (Matthew) Zhao Dept. of Math & Stats, Univ. of Calgary March 7, 2007 “ Lunch at the Lab ” Seminar.
Derivatives. Basic Derivatives Contracts Call Option Put Option Forward Contract Futures Contract.
Dr. Scott Brown Stock Options. Stocks vs Options Options Are sensitive to: The direction of the underlying stock. The time remaining before expiration.
Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes-Merton Model aka Black – Scholes Option Pricing Model (BSOPM)
Basic Options Strategy By Sir Pipsalot Recorded webinar available for Diamonds users at:
© 2004 South-Western Publishing 1 Chapter 7 Option Greeks.
Chapter 16 Option Valuation.
Dr. Scott Brown Stock Options. Principle 1: Lower Strike calls (and higher strike puts) must be more expensive For a Call Option, a lower strike price.
Last Study Topics 75 Years of Capital Market History Measuring Risk
25-0 Call Option Bounds Upper bound Call price must be less than or equal to the stock price Lower bound Call price must be greater than or equal to the.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.12-1 Option Greeks (cont’d) Option elasticity (  describes the risk.
Chapter 13 Market-Making and Delta-Hedging. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.13-2 What Do Market Makers.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice Hall. All rights reserved.10-1 The Binomial Solution How do we find a replicating portfolio consisting.
Undergraduate Research and Trading Club February 2, 2017
Financial Engineering
Using Greeks and Greek Ratios To Enhance Your Trading Returns
Options Greeks: The Vega
Chapter 7 Option Greeks © 2002 South-Western Publishing.
Options Greeks: The Delta
Option Greeks.
Jainendra Shandilya, CFA, CAIA
Fintech Chapter 12: Options
The Greek Letters Chapter 14
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to Financial Engineering Aashish Dhakal Week 5: The Greek Letter

Option Price  Dependency So relating these two factor, HOW Price of Option Change with change in Price & Time, Various Ratio has been developed to relate the relation. These ratio are Called GREEK. The only reason of calling this ratio as Greek is that, all ratio are named under Greek Letters Option Price Price of Underlying Asset Time to Expiration

Types of Greeks Here we have Following Five Types of Greeks: Delta (Hedge Ratio) Gamma Theta Vega Rho

DELTA – Impact of change in Rs 1 in U.Asset The delta ratio is the percentage change in the option premium for Each dollar change in underlying asset SUPPOSE: if you have a call option for Microsoft stock with a strike price of $30, and the stock price moves from $30 to $31, it will cause the option premium to increase by a certain amount— let’s say it increases by $.50 Then : the option will have a positive delta of 50%, because option premium increased $.50 for an increase of $1 in the stock price.

DELTA – Impact of change in Rs 1 in U.Asset DENOTED By WHOLE NOS: delta is often denoted by a whole number. so if an option has a 50% delta, then it will often be denoted as "50 delta“ NOTE: Put option with the same strike price will decline in price by almost the same amount, and will therefore have a negative delta. Use: Delta Hedging Estimating Probability of option moneyless: a stock with a delta of 85% is deemed to have an 85% chance of finishing in the money. However, delta does not measure probability per se.

Gamma – Impact of Change in Rs 1 price of underlying asset on delta Gamma is the change in delta for each unit change in the price of the underlying. Gamma changes in predictable ways. As an option goes more into the money, delta will increase until it tracks the underlying dollar for dollar; however, delta can never be greater than 1 or less than -1. When delta is close to 1 or -1, then gamma is near zero, because delta doesn’t change much with the price of the underlying. Gamma and delta are greatest when an option is at the money—when the strike price is equal to the price of the underlying.

Gamma – Impact of Change in Rs 1 price of underlying asset on delta The change in delta is greatest for options at the money, and decreases as the option goes more into the money or out of the money.

Theta- Impact of Time value per Day The option premium consists of a time value, that continuously declines as time to expiration nears, with most of the decline occurring near expiration. Theta: Theta is a measure of this time decay is expressed as the loss of time value per day Explanation: theta of -.1 indicates that the option is losing $.10 of time value per day.

Theta- Impact of Time value per Day Theta measures changes in value of options or a portfolio that is due to the passage of time. The holding of options has a negative position theta. The net of the positive and negative position thetas is the total position theta of the portfolio.

VEGA- Impact of change in 1% volatility Vega is often used to measure the change in implied volatility. Volatility is the variability in the price of the underlying over a given unit of time. Vega measures the change in the option premium due to changes in the volatility of the underlying, and is always expressed as a positive number. Because volatility only affects time value, vega tends to vary like the time value of an option—greatest when the option is at the money and least when the option is far out of the money or in the money. Vega measures how much an option price will change with a 1% change in implied volatility.

RHO – Impact of Change in 1% Risk free rate Rho is the amount of change in premiums due to a 1% change in the prevailing risk-free interest rate. Thus, a rho of 0.05 means that the theoretical value of call premiums will increase by 5%, whereas the theoretical value of put premiums will decrease by 5%, because put premiums move opposite to interest rates. The values are theoretical because it is market supply and demand that ultimately determines prices. Interest Rate & Risk Premium: higher interest rates correspond to lower present values, leading to higher call prices. Call Premium Put Premium

BEST REGARDS