Lecture 9 Option Strategies
Lecture 9 Option Strategies
Option strategies
Introduction
At the end of this lecture, you should
understand:
option concepts and various terminologies
various option strategies and their payoffs
put-call parity, and based on the parity derive the
value of puts or calls based on other parameters
in the parity
2
Derivatives
Derivatives are financial instruments whose value
depend on some observable variable
That observable value is most often the price of some
other financial asset, such as a stock price
If the derivative depends on a financial asset, that asset is
referred to as the underlying asset, denoted S
Most derivatives live for a predefined period of time
(just like bonds do)
When that period runs out, the derivative is said to mature
The time-of-maturity is typically denoted T
Many derivatives have all their cash flow consequences at
time T
We usually use t to denote the current time point
Option basics 3
Options
Options are derivatives that give the holder the
right but not the obligation to trade the
underlying asset
Call options give the right to buy an asset
Put options give the right to sell an asset
The price at which the asset can be bought/sold under
the option is called the strike price or the exercise
price
If an option is used to trade the underlying, its said to
be exercised
Option basics 4
Intrinsic value
The intrinsic value of an option is the value it would have if
exercised today
A call option gives the option holder the right to buy the
underlying asset for some exercise price X
If the current market price of the underlying asset, denoted St, is
higher than X, the option allows the holder to buy the
underlying asset at a discount
The size of the discount, St - X, is the options intrinsic value
If St is lower than or equal to X, the option holder would rather
buy the underlying asset at the market price and will ignore her
option
The options intrinsic value is zero
Hence the intrinsic value = max(0, St - X)
Option basics 5
Intrinsic value
A put option gives the option holder the right to sell the
underlying asset for some exercise price X
If the current market price of the underlying asset, denoted St, is
lower than X, the option allows the holder to sell the underlying
asset at a higher price
The size of the price increase, X - St, is the options intrinsic
value
If St is higher than or equal to X, the option holder would rather
sell the underlying asset at the market price and will ignore her
option
The options intrinsic value is zero
Hence the intrinsic value = max(0, X - St)
Option basics 6
Moneyness
If an option has a positive intrinsic value its said to be in the
money
For call options: X < St
For put options: X > St
If the strike price exactly equals the current market price of
the underlying asset, X = St, the option is said to be at the
money
Otherwise the option is said to be out of the money
For call options: X > St
For put options: X < St
To emphasize that the distance between the strike price and
the underlying price is large, options are sometimes said to be
deep in the money or deep out of the money
Option basics 7
Intrinsic value and moneyness: example
Suppose that you hold a call option on a stock with a strike
price, X = $110, and the option expires in one year, so T t = 1
If you exercise the option today:
If St=$120, its intrinsic value = max(0, St - X) = $10. The option is in the
money.
If St=$110, its intrinsic value = max(0, St - X) = $0. The option is at the
money.
If St=$100, its intrinsic value = max(0, St - X) = $0. The option is out of
the money.
But even in the 2nd and 3rd case, should the option carry some
value even if its intrinsic value is zero?
The answer is YES.
Option basics 8
Time value
Option basics 9
Time value
The time value comes mainly from the possibility that the
moneyness may increase in the future
The probability of that occurring increases with
the time to maturity, so the time value of an option
typically increases with the time to maturity
the volatility of the underlying assets price, so the time
value of an option always increases with the underlying
volatility
Option basics 10
European and American options
A distinction is typically made between two
different kinds of options
European options
Can only be exercised at time T
Are relatively easy to value using the Black-Scholes formula
Options written on indexes are generally European
American options
Can be exercised at any time before T
Are somewhat cumbersome to value
Options written on individual stocks are typically American
European and American have no geographical
meaning
Option basics 11
More option terminology
The purchase price of an option is called the option
premium (to distinguish it from the exercise price)
Creating (and selling) an option is known as writing or
issuing the option
This is equivalent to short-selling the option
If an option is exercised some form of settlement
occurs
Physical settlement: The writer of call option (or put
option) must make (or take) physical delivery of the
underlying asset, i.e. there is an actual trade
Cash settlement: The option writer must pay out the
intrinsic value of the option at the time of exercise. This is
usually the case when the underlying is a financial asset
Option basics 12
Contract size
Typically one option contract is written on
several units of the underlying asset
For instance, one call option contract may grant
the right to buy 100 units of the underlying stock
When doing valuation, we typically value the
right to buy one unit of the underlying and
multiply the result with the contract size
Option basics 13
The use of options
Hedging
Options can be used to construct insurance for other positions
For instance, if you hold a stock and worry about its price dropping
below $100, you can create insurance by buying a put option written
on the stock with a strike price of $100
Such insurance is known as hedging
Speculation
If you have strong views on the future returns of an asset, options may
be an efficient way on betting on those views
If you think a stock is undervalued, you can buy a call option
If you think a stock is overvalued, you can buy a put option
If your view is correct, then you can benefit from the asset price
movement, by paying only option premium (which is typically
much lower than the asset price). So it gives you the leverage.
This is how options were initially used (the right to use olive presses by
Thales around 350 B.C. and the formal option contracts during the
tulip bulb bubble of 1637
Option strategies 14
The use of options
In general, options (and other derivatives) are useful to
construct tailor made payoff functions
The flexibility makes it easy to suit individual hedging
needs.
The standardization of option contracts (size, strike price,
expiration date) by CBOE in 1973 and the creation of
Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) by SEC in 1975
significantly boosted the trading (especially for
speculation) in stock options
Option strategies 15
Payoff functions
We will typically consider European options that
are settled in cash
The only effect of the option (after its been bought) is
a time T cash-flow
The time T cash-flow is known as the payoff
The payoff is a function of the time T value of the
underlying and on the type of option
The payoff function for a call option is max(0,ST X)
The payoff function for a put option is max(0,X ST)
Option strategies 16
Payoff diagrams
We often illustrate the payoffs of an option or some
portfolio of instruments in so-called payoff diagrams
Asset value Risk-free Bond Call option Put option
$ $ $ $
FV
X
ST ST X ST X ST
Option strategies 18
Protective put
Components
One stock (or whatever the underlying is)
One long put
Purpose/benefit: A form of portfolio insurance, guaranteeing
a lowest possible value of the position
Cost: You always have to pay the option premium, even if you
dont end up using it
Protective put
$
ST X ST > X
Stock ST ST
+Put X - ST 0 X
=Total X ST
X ST
Option strategies 19
Covered call
Components
One short call
One stock
Purpose/benefit: Gain the call premium
Cost: Loss of upside from the stock
ST X ST X ST
Option strategies 20
Straddle
Components
One long call with strike price X
One long put with strike price X
Purpose/benefit: Bet on high volatility
Cost: The net premiums are positive (why?)
Straddle
$
ST X ST > X
Call 0 ST - X
X - ST X
+Put 0
=Total X - ST ST - X
X ST
Option strategies 21
Butterfly spread
Components
One long call with strike price X
One long call with strike price X +
Two short calls (i.e., selling two calls) with strike price X
Purpose/benefit: Bet on low volatility (underlying price will be within a
narrow range of X)
Butterfly spread
Cost: The net premiums are positive (why?)
$
X- X X+ ST
X X
ST X ST X ST
-X -X