0% found this document useful (0 votes)
39 views1 page

BlackScholes Problem

The document discusses European call and put options. It provides an example of pricing a 6-month European call option and put option with an exercise price of $40 given a stock price of $35, risk-free rate of 5%, and volatility of 40% using the Black-Scholes formula. It also examines how the option value changes with different volatility, stock price, and duration through data tables.

Uploaded by

lubna
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
39 views1 page

BlackScholes Problem

The document discusses European call and put options. It provides an example of pricing a 6-month European call option and put option with an exercise price of $40 given a stock price of $35, risk-free rate of 5%, and volatility of 40% using the Black-Scholes formula. It also examines how the option value changes with different volatility, stock price, and duration through data tables.

Uploaded by

lubna
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 1

European Options1

A European call option on a stock earns the owner an amount equal to the price
at expiration minus the exercise price, if the price of the stock on which the call is
written exceeds the exercise price. Otherwise, the call pays nothing. A European
put option earns the owner an amount equal to the exercise price minus the price
at expiration, if the price at expiration is less than the exercise price. Otherwise
the put pays nothing. The file BlackScholes.xls contains a template that
computes (based on the well-known Black-Scholes formula) the price of a
European call and put based on the following inputs: today's stock price, the
duration of the option (in years), the option's exercise price, the risk-free rate of
interest (per year), and the annual volatility in stock price. For example, a 40%
volatility means approximately that the standard deviation of annual percentage
changes in the stock price are 40%.
a. Consider a 6-month European call option with exercise price $40.
Assume a current stock price of $35, a risk-free rate of 5%, and an
annual volatility of 40%. Determine the price of the call option.
b. Use a data table to show how a change in volatility changes the value
of the option. Give an intuitive explanation for your results.
c. Use a data table to show how a change in today's stock price changes
the option's value. Give an intuitive explanation for your results.
d. Use a data table to show how a change in the option's duration
changes the option's value. Give an intuitive explanation for your
results.
Repeat parts a-d for a 6-month European put option with exercise price $40.
Again, assume a current stock price of $35, a risk-free rate of 5%, and an annual
volatility of 40%.

1
Based on 2-24 and 2-25 (p. 63) in Practical Management Science (4th ed., Winston and Albright, 2012
Duxbury Press).

You might also like