Chapter 8
Financial Options and
Applications in Corporate
Finance
1
Topics in Chapter
Financial Options Terminology
Option Price Relationships
Black-Scholes Option Pricing Model
Put-Call Parity
The Big Picture:
The Value of a Stock Option
Cost of
equity (rs)
D1
Stock Price =
(1 + rs )1
Risk-free bond
Dividends
(Dt)
D2
+
(1 + rs)2
Portfolio of stock and
risk-free bond that
replicates cash flows
of the option
... +
D
+
(1 + rs)
Value of option must
be the same as the
replicating portfolio
What is a financial option?
An option is a contract which gives
its holder the right, but not the
obligation, to buy (or sell) an asset
at some predetermined price
within a specified period of time.
What is the single most
important
characteristic of an option?
It does not obligate its owner to
take any action. It merely gives
the owner the right to buy or sell
an asset.
Option Terminology
Call option: An option to buy a
specified number of shares of a
security within some future period.
Put option: An option to sell a
specified number of shares of a
security within some future
period.
6
Option Terminology
Strike (or exercise) price: The
price stated in the option contract
at which the security can be
bought or sold.
Expiration date: The last date the
option can be exercised.
Option Terminology
(Continued)
Exercise value: The value of a call
option if it were exercised today =
Max[0, Current stock price - Strike
price]
Note: The exercise value is zero if the
stock price is less than the strike
price.
Option price: The market price of
the option contract.
8
Option Terminology
(Continued)
Time value: Option price minus the
exercise value. It is the additional
value because the option has
remaining time until it expires.
Option Terminology
(Continued)
Writing a call option: For every new
option, there is an investor who
writes the option.
A writer creates the contract, sells it
to another investor, and must fullfill
the option contract if it is exercised.
For example, the writer of a call must
be prepared to sell a share of stock to
the investor who owns the call.
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Option Terminology
(Continued)
Covered option: A call option
written against stock held in an
investors portfolio.
Naked (uncovered) option: An
option written without the stock to
back it up.
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Option Terminology
(Continued)
In-the-money call: A call whose
strike price is less than the current
price of the underlying stock.
Out-of-the-money call: A call
option whose strike price exceeds
the current stock price.
12
Option Terminology
(Continued)
LEAPS: Long-term Equity
AnticiPation Securities that are
similar to conventional options
except that they are long-term
options with maturities of up to 2
years.
13
Consider the following
data:
Strike price = $25.
Stock Price
Call Option Price
$25
$3.00
30
7.50
35
12.00
40
16.50
45
21.00
50
25.50
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Exercise Value of Option
Price of
stock (a)
Strike
price (b)
Exercise value
of option (a)(b)
$25.00
30.00
35.00
40.00
45.00
50.00
$25.00
25.00
25.00
25.00
25.00
25.00
$0.00
5.00
10.00
15.00
20.00
25.00
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Market Price of Option
Price of Strike
Exer. Mkt. Price
stock
price val. (c) of opt. (d)
(a)
(b)
$25.00 $25.00 $0.00
$3.00
30.00
25.00
5.00
7.50
35.00
25.00 10.00
12.00
40.00
25.00 15.00
16.50
45.00
25.00 20.00
21.00
50.00
25.00 25.00
25.50
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Time Value of Option
Price of Strike
Exer.
Mkt. P
of
stock
price Val. (c)
(a)
(b)
opt. (d)
$25.00 $25.00 $0.00
$3.00
30.00
25.00
5.00
7.50
35.00
25.00 10.00 12.00
40.00
25.00 15.00 16.50
45.00
25.00 20.00 21.00
50.00
25.00 25.00 25.50
Time
value
(d) (c)
$3.00
2.50
2.00
1.50
1.00
0.50
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Call Time Value Diagram
Option value
30
25
20
Market price
15
Exercise value
10
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
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Stock Price
Option Time Value Versus
Exercise Value
The time value, which is the option
price less its exercise value,
declines as the stock price
increases.
This is due to the declining degree
of leverage provided by options as
the underlying stock price
increases, and the greater loss
potential of options at higher
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The Binomial Model
Stock assumptions:
Current price: P = $27
In next 6 months, stock can either
Go up by factor of 1.41
Go down by factor of 0.71
Call option assumptions
Expires in t = 6 months = 0.5 years
Exercise price: X = $25
Risk-free rate: rRF = 6%
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Binomial Payoffs at Calls
Expiration
Ending "up" stock price = P(u) = $38.07
Option payoff: Cu = MAX[0,P(u)X] = $13.07
Current
stock price
P = $27
Ending down" stock price = P(d) = $19.17
Option payoff: Cd = MAX[0,P(d)X] = $0.00
u = 1.41
d = 0.71
X = $25
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Create portfolio by writing 1
option and buying Ns shares of
stock.
Portfolio payoffs:
Stock is up: Ns(P)(u) Cu
Stock is down: Ns(P)(d) Cd
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The Hedge Portfolio with a
Riskless Payoff
Set payoffs for up and down equal,
solve for number of shares:
Ns= (Cu Cd) / P(u d)
In our example:
Ns= ($13.07 $0) / $27(1.41 0.71)
Ns=0.6915
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Riskless Portfolios Payoffs
at Calls Expiration: $13.26
Ending "up" stock price = P(u) = $38.07
Current
stock price
P = $27
Ending "up" stock value = NsP(u) = $26.33
Option payoff: Cu = MAX[0,P(u)X] = $13.07
Portfolio's net payoff = P(u)Ns - Cu = $13.26
Ending down" stock price = P(d) = $19.17
u = 1.41
d = 0.71
X = $25
Ns = 0.6915
Ending down" stock value = NsP(d) = $13.26
Option payoff: Cd = MAX[0,P(d)X] = $0.00
Portfolio's net payoff = P(d)Ns - Cd = $13.26
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Riskless payoffs earn the
risk-free rate of return.
Discount at risk-free rate
compounded daily.
VPortfolio = PV of riskless payoff
VPortfolio = Payoff / (1 + rRF/365)365*t
VPortfolio = $13.26 / (1 +
0.06/365)365*0.5
VPortfolio = $12.87
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The Value of the Call
Option
Because the portfolio is riskless:
By definition, the value of the
portfolio is:
VPortfolio = PV of riskless payoff
VPortfolio = Ns(P) VC
Equating these and rearranging,
we get the value of the call:
VC = Ns(P) PV of riskless payoff
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Value of Call
VC = Ns(P) Payoff / (1 +
rRF/365)365*t
VC = 0.6915($27)
$13.26 / (1 + 0.06/365)365*0.5
= $18.67 $12.87
= $5.80
(VC = $5.81 if no rounding in any intermediate
27
steps.)
Multi-Period Binomial
Pricing
If you divided time into smaller periods
and allowed the stock price to go up or
down each period, you would have a
more reasonable outcome of possible
stock prices when the option expires.
This type of problem can be solved with
a binomial lattice.
As time periods get smaller, the
binomial option price converges to the
Black-Scholes price, which we discuss in
later slides.
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Replicating Portfolio
From the previous slide we have:
VC = Ns(P) Payoff / (1 + rRF/365)365*t
The right side of the equation is the
same as creating a portfolio by buying
Ns shares of stock and borrowing an
amount equal to the present value of
the hedge portfolios riskless payoff
(which must be repaid).
The payoffs of the replicating portfolio
are the same as the options payoffs.
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Replicating Portfolio
Payoffs: Amount Borrowed
and Repaid
Amount borrowed:
PV of payoff = $12.87
Repayment due to borrowing this
amount:
Repayment = $12.87 (1 + rRF/365)365*t
Repayment = $13.26
Notice that this is the same as the
payoff of the hedge portfolio.
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Replicating Portfolio Net
Payoffs
Stock up:
Stock down:
Value of stock = 0.6915($38.07) =$26.33
Repayment of borrowing = $13.26
Net portfolio payoff = $13.07
Value of stock = 0.6915($19.17) =$13.26
Repayment of borrowing = $13.26
Net portfolio payoff = $0
Notice that the replicating portfolios
payoffs exactly equal those of the
option.
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Replicating Portfolios and
Arbitrage
The payoffs of the replicating portfolio
exactly equal those of the call option.
Cost of replicating portfolio
= Ns(P) Amount borrowed
= 0.6915($27) $12.87
= $18.67 $12.87
= $5.80
If the call options price is not the same
as the cost of the replicating portfolio,
then there will be an opportunity for
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arbitrage.
Arbitrage Example
Suppose the option sells for $6.
You can write option, receiving $6.
Create replicating portfolio for $5.80,
netting $6.00 $5.80 = $0.20.
Arbitrage:
You invested none of your own money.
You have no risk (the replicating portfolios
payoffs exactly equal the payoffs you will
owe because you wrote the option.
You have cash ($0.20) in your pocket.
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Arbitrage and Equilibrium
Prices
If you could make a sure arbitrage
profit, you would want to repeat it (and
so would other investors).
With so many trying to write (sell)
options, the extra supply would drive
the options price down until it reached
$5.80 and there were no more arbitrage
profits available.
The opposite would occur if the option
sold for less than $5.80.
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Assumptions of the
Black-Scholes Option Pricing
Model
The stock underlying the call
option provides no dividends
during the call options life.
There are no transactions costs for
the sale/purchase of either the
stock or the option.
Risk-free rate, rRF, is known and
constant during the options life.
(More...)
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Assumptions (Continued)
Security buyers may borrow any
fraction of the purchase price at the
short-term risk-free rate.
No penalty for short selling and sellers
receive immediately full cash proceeds
at todays price.
Call option can be exercised only on its
expiration date.
Security trading takes place in
continuous time, and stock prices move
randomly in continuous time.
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What are the three
equations that make up
the OPM?
VC = P[N(d1)] - Xe -rRFt[N(d2)]
ln(P/X) + [rRF + (2/2)]t
d1 =
t 0.5
d2 = d1 - t 0.5
37
What is the value of the
following call option
according to the OPM?
Assume:
P = $27
X = $25
rRF = 6%
t = 0.5 years
= 0.49
38
First, find d1 and d2.
d1 = {ln($27/$25) + [(0.06 + 0.492/2)]
(0.5)}
{(0.49)(0.7071)}
d1 = 0.4819
d2 = 0.4819 - (0.49)(0.7071)
d2 = 0.1355
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Second, find N(d1) and
N(d2)
N(d1) = N(0.4819) = 0.6851
N(d2) = N(0.1355) = 0.5539
Note: Values obtained from Excel
using NORMSDIST function. For
example:
N(d1) = NORMSDIST(0.4819)
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Third, find value of option.
VC = $27(0.6851) - $25e-(0.06)(0.5)
(0.5539)
= $19.3536 - $25(0.97045)
(0.6327)
= $5.06
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What impact do the following
parameters have on a call options
value?
Current stock price: Call option
value increases as the current
stock price increases.
Strike price: As the exercise price
increases, a call options value
decreases.
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Impact on Call Value
(Continued)
Option period: As the expiration date is
lengthened, a call options value
increases (more chance of becoming in
the money.)
Risk-free rate: Call options value tends
to increase as rRF increases (reduces the
PV of the exercise price).
Stock return variance: Option value
increases with variance of the
underlying stock (more chance43of
Put Options
A put option gives its holder the
right to sell a share of stock at a
specified stock on or before a
particular date.
44
Put-Call Parity
Portfolio 1:
Put option,
Share of stock, P
Portfolio 2:
Call option, VC
PV of exercise price, X
45
Expiration Date T for PT<X
and PTX
PT<X
PTX
Port. 1 Port. 2
Stock
Put
Port. 1
PT
PT
X-PT
Port. 2
Call
PT-X
Cash
Total
PT
PT
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Put-Call Parity Relationship
Portfolio payoffs are equal, so portfolio
values also must be equal.
Put + Stock = Call + PV of Exercise Price
-rRFt
Put + P = VC + Xe
-rRFt
Put = VC P + Xe
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