Lecture
Lecture
• Exotic options
• Descriptions and uses
• Pricing with Monte Carlo simulations and binomial trees
2
Exotic Options
• Bermudan option
• Can be exercised on certain pre-specified dates prior to expiration
• Between American and European
• Generally can be priced like American options on binomial tree
• Strike price may change over the life of the option
• E.g., employee stock options that are reset when they become far out-of-the-money
4
Binary options
• Cash-or-nothing:
• Call: pays 1 if ST > K, zero otherwise:
• Put: pays 1 if ST < K, zero otherwise:
• Asset-or-nothing:
• Call: pays stock price if ST > K, zero otherwise:
• Put: pays stock price if ST < K, zero otherwise:
• Question: What feature of an Asian call option tends to make it less valuable
than an otherwise identical European call option?
6
Basic types of Asian options
• Average can be based on geometric or arithmetic mean
7
Example: Hedging currency exposure
8
Example: Hedging currency exposure
We saw that currency options can be valued using BSM formula with constant
dividend yield, recognizing that currency earns risk-free interest rate
Example: Assume the current exchange rate is $0.9/EUR, strike K = 0.9, r$ = 6%,
r€ = 3%, dollar/euro volatility σ = 10%
• 12 European puts expiring in 1 year 0.2753
• A basket of 12 monthly options 0.2178
• 12 Geometric average puts 0.1796
• 12 Arithmetic average puts 0.1764
• Currency swap ?
9
Pricing Asian options
10
Barrier options
• Payoff depends on whether over its life the underlying price hits a certain barrier
• Implies payoff is path dependent
12
Pricing barrier options
• Parity relations:
• Can price on binomial tree (but complicated by path dependence) or use Monte Carlo
simulation
13
Lookback options
• Relatively expensive
• Closed form solutions assume
continuous looks and lognormal
process
• Related to “shout” options
14
Exchange options
• Pays off only if the underlying asset outperforms some other asset (the
benchmark asset)
max(0, ST - NT )
15
Compound options
• An option to buy or sell an option
• Call on call
• Put on call
• Call on put
• Put on put
16
Gap options
17
Illustration: Gap call
K1 = 90
K2 = 100
18
Quantos
• A quanto is a contract that allows an investor in one currency to hold an asset
denominated in another currency without exchange rate risk
• Example: Nikkei put warrants traded on the American Stock Exchange
• Payoff and premium are in dollars, but directly scaled by the yen price of the
Nikkei index relative to a yen strike price
Quantos are attractive because they shield the purchaser from exchange rate fluctuations. If a US investor
were to invest directly in the Japanese stocks that comprise the Nikkei, he would be exposed to both
fluctuations in the Nikkei index and fluctuations in the USD/JPY exchange rate.
Essentially, a quanto has an embedded currency forward with a variable notional amount. It is that variable
notional amount that give quantos their name—"quanto" is short for "quantity adjusting option."
19
Pricing exotic options
20
Pricing exotics
21
Risk neutral trees
22
Monte Carlo simulations on risk-neutral trees
23
Monte Carlo simulations on risk-neutral trees
24
Monte Carlo simulations on risk-neutral trees
25
Multi-step trees
26
Monte Carlo simulations on multi-step trees
27
Monte Carlo simulations on multi-step trees
28
Why Monte Carlo simulations?
• Why do we need Monte Carlo simulations when we have the tree itself?
• Monte Carlo Simulations may be useful to price derivative securities with path
dependent payoff
• That is, the value at maturity depends on the path taken by the stock during the life of
the security
29
Path-dependent option
30
Why Monte Carlo simulations?
When the number of steps gets large, path
dependent options become much more
difficult to price without Monte Carlo
31
Why Monte Carlo simulations?
32
Monte Carlo simulations without trees
33
Monte Carlo simulations under log-normality
34
Monte Carlo simulations under log-normality
This figure shows the outcomes for 10-period paths, for 10 Monte
Carlo simulations:
35
Monte Carlo simulations with multiple factors
36
Monte Carlo simulations with multiple factors
37
Monte Carlo simulations with multiple factors
38
Monte Carlo simulation with multiple factors
Stochastic volatility and the Heston model
39
Takeaways on exotics
• We’ve seen that to understand exotic options some key questions are:
• What purpose(s) does the exotic option serve?
• Can the exotic option be approximated by a portfolio of ordinary options?
• What are the key determinants of the value of an exotic option? Intuition?
40
Takeaways on pricing exotics numerically
• Tools for pricing include modified BSM, binomial trees, and Monte Carlo
• Binomial trees
• Generally need to use binomial trees for American-style options where a decision has to be
made about when to exercise
• Most useful when working backwards and seeing ordered outcomes is essential
• Monte Carlo simulation
• One of the main tools used by practitioners to price complex securities under fairly general
assumptions about the underlying stochastic processes
• Just three steps:
(1) Simulate many paths of underlying stochastic variables under the risk neutral probabilities
(2) For each path, compute the discounted simulated payoff of the derivative security
(3) Estimate the derivative price as the average of discounted payoffs across paths
41
Takeaways on numerical pricing of exotics
42