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ch02 Derivative

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39 views44 pages

ch02 Derivative

Uploaded by

Fathy Mohamed
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Chapter 2

Basic Principles of
Stock Options

1 © 2004 South-Western Publishing


Outline
 What options are and where they come
from
 Why options are a good idea
 Where and how options trade
 Components of the option premium
 Where profits and losses come from with
options

2
What Options Are and Where
They Come From
 Calland put options
 Categories of options
 Standardized option characteristics
 Where options come from
 Opening and closing transactions
 The role of the options clearing corporation

3
Call and Put Options
 Call Options
– A call option gives its owner the right to buy; it is not a
promise to buy
 For example, a store holding an item for you for a fee is a
call option
 Put Options
– A put option gives its owner the right to sell; it is not a
promise to sell
 For example, a lifetime money back guarantee policy on
items sold by a company is an embedded put option

4
Categories of Options
 An American option gives its owner the
right to exercise the option anytime prior to
option expiration

A European option may only be exercised


at expiration

5
Categories of Options (cont’d)
 Optionsgiving the right to buy or sell
shares of stock (stock options) are the best-
known options
– An option contract is for 100 shares of stock

 Theunderlying asset of an index option is


some market measure like the S&P 500
index
– Cash-settled

6
Standardized Option
Characteristics
 Expiration dates
– The Saturday following the third Friday of certain
designated months for most options
 Striking price
– The predetermined transaction price, in multiples of
$2.50 or $5, depending on current stock price
 Underlying Security
– The security the option gives you the right to buy or
sell
– Both puts and calls are based on 100 shares of the
underlying security

7
Standardized Option
Characteristics (cont’d)

 The option premium is the amount you pay


for the option (contract price)

8
Identifying An Option

Expiration (3rd Friday in October) Type of option

Microsoft OCT 80 Call @ 2


Premium –
contact price
Underlying asset Strike price
(Microsoft common stock) ($80 per share)

9
Opening and Closing
Transactions
 The first trade someone makes in a
particular option is an opening transaction
for that person

 When the individual subsequently closes


that position out with a second trade, this
latter trade is a closing transaction

10
Opening and Closing
Transactions (cont’d)
 When someone buys an option as an
opening transaction, the owner of an option
will ultimately do one of three things with it:
– Sell it to someone else
– Let it expire
– Exercise it
 For
example, buying a ticket to an athletic
event

11
Opening and Closing
Transactions (cont’d)
 When someone sells an option as an
opening transaction, this is called writing
the option
– No matter what the owner of an option does, the
writer of the option keeps the option premium
that he or she received when it was sold

12
The Role of the Options
Clearing Corporation (OCC)
 TheOptions Clearing Corporation (OCC)
contributes substantially to the smooth
operation of the options market
– It positions itself between every buyer and seller
and acts as a guarantor of all option trades
– It sets minimum capital requirements and
provides for the efficient transfer of funds
among members as gains or losses occur

13
Why Options Are a Good Idea
 Increased risk
 Portfolio risk management
 Risk transfer
 Financial leverage
 Income generation

14
Exchanges
 Major options exchanges in the U.S.:
– Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE)
– American Stock Exchange (AMEX)
– Philadelphia Stock Exchange (Philly)
– Pacific Stock Exchange (PSE)
– International Securities Exchange (ISE)
 Foreign options exchanges also exist

15
Over-the-Counter Options
 With an over-the-counter option:
– Institutions enter into “private” option
arrangements with brokerage firms or other
dealers
– The striking price, life of the option, and premium
are negotiated between the parties involved

16
Other Listed Options
 Long-Term Equity Anticipation Security
(LEAP)
– Options similar to ordinary listed options,
except they are longer term
 May have a life up to 39 months
– All LEAPs expire in January
– Presently available on only the most active
underlying securities

17
Trading Mechanics (cont’d)
 Types of orders
– A market order expresses a wish to buy or sell
immediately, at the current price
– A limit order specifies a particular price (or
better) beyond which no trade is desired
 Typically require a time limit, such as “for the day” or
“good ‘til canceled (GTC)”

18
Trading Mechanics (cont’d)
 Trading Floor Systems
– Under the specialist system, there is a single
individual through whom all orders to buy or
sell a particular security must pass
 Used at the AMEX and the Philly
 The specialist keeps an order book with limit order
from all over the country
 The specialist’s job is to maintain a fair and orderly
market

19
Trading Mechanics (cont’d)
 Trading Floor Systems (cont’d)
– Under the marketmaker system, the specialist’s
activities are divided among three groups of
people:
Marketmakers
Floor brokers
Order Book Official

20
The Option Premium
 Intrinsic
value and time value
 Option price quotations

Premium = intrinsic value + time value

21
Intrinsic Value and Time Value
 Intrinsicvalue is the amount that an option
is immediately worth given the relation
between the option striking price and the
current stock price
– For call option, intrinsic value =
stock price – striking price
– For a put option, intrinsic value =
striking price – stock price
– Intrinsic value cannot be < zero

22
Intrinsic value=
+……………….in the money
-………………...out the money
Zero………………….at the money(indifferent)

23
Intrinsic Value and Time Value
(cont’d)
 Intrinsic value (cont’d)
– An option with no intrinsic value is out-of-the-
money
– An option whose striking price is exactly equal
to the price of the underlying security is at-the-
money

24
Intrinsic Value and Time Value
(cont’d)
 Time value is equal to the premium minus
the intrinsic value

25
Option Price Quotations
 Every service that reports option prices will
show, at a minimum, the
– Striking price
– Expiration
– Premium

26
Option Price Quotations
(cont’d)
Intraday Prices from September 15, 2003
Microsoft Stock Price = $28.51
Call Put

Strike Expiration Volume Last Open Interest Volume Last Open Interest

20 SEP 03 8.60 462 0 0 51


0

20 OCT 0 8.62 3079 0 0 13013

22.50 SEP 0 6.04 781 0 0 5920

22.50 OCT 0 6.06 7050 2 0.05 35024

27
Profits and Losses With
Options
 Understanding the exercise of an option
 Exercise procedures
 Profit and loss diagrams
 A note on margin requirements

28
Understanding the Exercise of
an Option
 AnAmerican option can be exercised
anytime prior to the expiration of the option
– Exercising an American option early amounts
to abandoning any time value remaining in the
option
A European option can only be exercised
at maturity

29
Exercise Procedures
 Notifyyour broker
 Broker notifies the Options Clearing
Corporation
– Selects a contra party to receive the exercise
notice
– Neither the option exerciser nor the option
writer knows the identity of the opposite party

30
Profit and Loss Diagrams
 Vertical axis reflects profits or losses on the
expiration day resulting from a particular strategy
 Horizontal axis reflects the stock price on the
expiration day
 Any bend in the diagram occurs at the striking
price
 By convention, diagrams ignore the effect of
commissions that must be paid

31
Buying a Call Option (“Going
Long”)
 Example: buy a Microsoft October $25 call
@ $3
– Maximum loss is $3
– Profit potential is unlimited
– Breakeven is $28

32
Example:
buy a Microsoft October 25 call for $3.
assume at maturity date we find one of the
following market scenarios

MP 10 20 25 26 27 28 30 40

Buyer (net -3 -3 -3 -2 -1 0 2 12
gain/ loss)

Seller(writer) +3 +3 3 2 +1 0 -2 -12

33
Notes on call

 Call option exercised only when MP> strike price


 BEP of call= strike price +premium
 Intrinsic value of call option = MP- strike price
 Max loss of buyer = the premium
 Seller (writer) in option always with limited gain =
premium
 The buyer in call has unlimited gains
 The writer in call options has unlimited losses
34
Buying a Call Option (cont’d)
 Profit& loss
Unlimited
Breakeven = $28gains

 Limited gains

MP
0 20 25 28 60Inf 80
100
Maximum Limited losses
loss = $3
Unlimited losses

35
Writing a Call Option (“Short
Option”)
 Ignoring commissions, the options market
is a zero sum game
– Aggregate gains and losses will always net to
zero
– The most an option writer can make is the
option premium
 Writinga call without owning the underlying
shares is called writing a naked (uncovered)
call

36
Writing a Call Option (cont’d)

Breakeven = $28

Maximum
Profit = $3
0 20 25 28 40 60
80 100

37
Buying a Put Option (“Going
Long”)
 Example: buy a Microsoft April $25 put @$1
– Maximum loss is $1
– Maximum profit is $24
– Breakeven is $24

38
buy a Microsoft April $25 put for $1

 Assume the following MP of MST


MP 0 10 20 23 24 25 26 30 40
Long 24 14 4 1 0 -1 -1 -1 -1
(buyer)-
(net gain)

Short -24 -14 -4 -1 0 +1 +1 +1 +1


(writer)
(buy
stock)

39
Notes

1. Net gain or loss for put option (buyer)=


Strike price – MP- premium=
MP@ 10
25- 10- 1=14
2. BEP of put = strike price – premium
3. When MP = st price , this point called as indifferent
4. Put option exercised only when MP< strike price
5.The Buyer in put has limited losses amounted by premium,
and limited profit equal the BEP value

40
Buying a Put Option (cont’d)
$24
Breakeven
= $24
24$ The seller area
Limited gains
Limited gain
1$

MP inf
-1$
0 20
Limited losses24 25 80
100
The buyer area
Limited losses

41
Writing a Put Option (“Short
Option”)
 Theput option writer has the obligation to
buy if the put is exercised by the holder

42
Writing a Put Option (cont’d)

Breakeven = $24

$1

0 10 20 24 25
100

$24

43
A Note on Margin Requirements
A margin requirement is analogous to
posting collateral and can be satisfied by a
deposit of cash or other securities into your
brokerage account

 The margin system is to reduce the


likelihood that option writers will be unable
to fulfill their obligations

44

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