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Chapter 6 Option Pricing 2022 S

A binomial tree model is used to value options by breaking time into discrete steps and modeling the possible paths the underlying asset price may take. At each node, risk-neutral probabilities are used to discount expected payoffs to derive the current option price. The model illustrates how to value options by assuming the expected return on the underlying asset equals the risk-free rate. Delta also represents the sensitivity of the option price to changes in the stock price.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views32 pages

Chapter 6 Option Pricing 2022 S

A binomial tree model is used to value options by breaking time into discrete steps and modeling the possible paths the underlying asset price may take. At each node, risk-neutral probabilities are used to discount expected payoffs to derive the current option price. The model illustrates how to value options by assuming the expected return on the underlying asset equals the risk-free rate. Delta also represents the sensitivity of the option price to changes in the stock price.
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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CHAPTER 6

OPTION PRICING

1
Outline
1. Binomial trees
2. Black-Scholes Pricing Formulas

2
Valuation of options - Binomial trees
• A useful and very popular technique for pricing
an option involves constructing a binomial tree.
• This is a diagram representing diffrent possible
paths that might be followed by the stock price
over the life of an option.

• Base on no-arbitrage arguments and a principle


of risk neutral valuation.

3
A Simple Binomial Model

• A stock price is currently $20  Underlying asset


• In 3 months it will be either $22 or $18
• Price of a call option of this stock, T=3 months

Stock Price = $22


Stock price = $20
Stock Price = $18

4
A Call Option
A 3-month call option on the stock has a strike price
of 21. Port has 2 positions: long delta shares +short 1
call.

Stock Price = $22


Option Price = $1
Stock price = $20
Option Price=?
Stock Price = $18
Option Price = $0

5
Setting Up a Riskless Portfolio
• Consider the Portfolio: long D shares
short 1 call option

22D – 1

• Portfolio is riskless when 22D – 1 = 18D or


D = 0.25 18D

6
Valuing the Portfolio
(Risk-Free Rate is 12%)

• The riskless portfolio is:


long 0.25 shares short 1 call
option
• The value of the portfolio in 3 months is 22 ´
0.25 – 1 = 4.50
• The value of the portfolio today is
4.5e – 0.12´0.25 = 4.3670

7
Valuing the Option
• The portfolio that is
long 0.25 shares short 1
option
is worth 4.367
• The value of the shares is 5.000
(= 0.25 ´ 20 )
• The value of the option is therefore
0.633 (= 5.000 – 4.367 )

8
Generalization (a)
A derivative lasts for time T and is
dependent on a stock

S 0u
ƒu
S0
ƒ S 0d
ƒd

9
Generalization (b)
• Consider the portfolio that is long D shares and short 1
derivative

S0uD – ƒu

• The portfolio is riskless when S0uDS0–dD


ƒu –
= Sƒ0ddD – ƒd or

ƒu  f d

S 0u  S 0 d
10
Generalization (c)
• Value of the portfolio at time T is S0uD
– ƒu
• Value of the portfolio today is (S0uD –
ƒu)e–rT
• Another expression for the portfolio
value today is S0D – f
• Hence ƒ = S0D –
(S0uD – ƒu )e–rT

11
Generalization (d)

• Substituting for D we obtain


ƒ = [ pƒu + (1 – p)ƒd ]e–rT

where
rT
e d
p
ud

12
p as a Probability
• It is natural to interpret p and 1-p as probabilities of
up and down movements
• The value of a derivative is then its expected payoff in
a risk-neutral world discounted at the risk-free rate

S0u
p ƒu
S0
ƒ S0d
(1 –
p) ƒd
13
Risk-Neutral Valuation
• When the probability of an up and down movements are p
and 1-p the expected stock price at time T is S0erT
• This shows that the stock price earns the risk-free rate
• Binomial trees illustrate the general result that to value a
derivative we can assume that the expected return on the
underlying asset is the risk-free rate and discount at the risk-
free rate
• This is known as using risk-neutral valuation

14
Original Example Revisited
S0u = 22
p ƒu = 1
S0
ƒ that gives a return on the stock
• Since p is the probability
( 1 S0d = 18
equal to the risk-free rate. We – can find it from
20e0.12 ´0.25 = 22p + 18(1 –pp)) ƒd = 0
which gives p = 0.6523
• Alternatively, we can use the formula

e rT  d e 0.120.25  0.9
p   0.6523
ud 1.1  0.9

15
Valuing the Option Using Risk-Neutral
Valuation

S0u = 22
5 23 ƒu = 1
0. 6
S0
ƒ
0.34 S0d = 18
77
The value of the option is ƒd = 0
e–0.12´0.25 (0.6523´1 + 0.3477´0)
= 0.633

16
A Two-Step Example
24.2
22

20 19.8
• Each time step is 3 months
• K=21, r=12% 18
16.2

17
Valuing a Call Option
24.2
D
3.2
22
B
20 2.0257 19.8
A E
1.2823 0.0
• Value at node B is 18
C
e–0.12´0.25
(0.6523´3.2 + 0.3477´0)0.0
= 2.0257
16.2
• Value at node A is F 0.0
e–0.12´0.25(0.6523´2.0257 + 0.3477´0) = 1.2823

18
• Ex: Consider a 2-year European put with a strike
price of $52 on a stock whose current price is
$50. Suppose that there two time steps of 1
year, and in each time step the stock price either
moves up by 20% or moves down by 20%. The
risk-free rate is 5% per annum.

• u =1.2, d =0.8

e rT  d e 0.051  0.8
p   0.6282
ud 1.2  0.8

19
A Put Option Example
Figure 11.7, page 246

K = 52, time step =1yr


r = 5% 72
D
0
60
B
50 1.4147 48
A E
4.1923 4
40
C
9.4636 32
F 20

20
What Happens When an Option is
American

72
D
0
60
B
50 1.4147 48
A E
5.0894 4
40
C
12.0 32
F 20

21
Delta
• Delta (D) is the ratio of the change in the
price of a stock option to the change in the
price of the underlying stock
• The value of D varies from node to node
• The number of units of stock we should hold
for each option shorted in ordered to create
a riskless portfolio.
fu  fd

S0u  S 0 d

22
Problems
1. A stock price is currently $40. It is known that at the
end of 1 month, it will be either $42 or $38. The risk-
free rate is 8% per annum with continuous
compounding. What is the value of a 1-month
European call option with a strike price of $39?
2. A stock price is currently $50. It is known that at
the end of 6 months, it will be either $45 or $55. The
risk-free rate is 10% per annum with continuous
compounding. What are the values of a 6-month
European call option and a 6-month European put
with a strike price of $50? Verify that the European
call and European put prices satisfy put-call parity.

23
3. A stock price is currently $100. Over each of
the next two 6-month periods it is expected to
go up by 10% or down by 10%. The risk-free
rate is 8% per annum with continuous
compounding. What is the value of a 1-year
European call option with a strike price of
$100?
4. A stock price is currently $50. Over each of
the next two-3month periods it is expected to
go up by 6% or down by 5%. The risk-free
interest rate is 5% per annum with continuous
compounding. What is the value of a 6-month
European call option with a strike price of $51?
24
5. A stock price is currently $80. It is known
that at the end of 4 months it will be either
$75 or $85. The risk-free rate is 5% per
annum with continuous compounding.
What is the value of a 4-month European
put option with a strike price of $80.
6. A stock price is currently $40. It is known
that at the end of 3 months it will be either
$45 or $35. The risk-free rate is 8% per
annum with continuous compounding.
What is the value of a 3-month European
put option with a strike price of $40?
25
7. A stock price is currently $40. Over each
of the next two 3-month periods, it is
expected to go up by 10% or down by
10%. The risk-free rate is 12% per annum
with continuous compounding. What is the
value of a 6-month European put option
with a strike price of $42?

26
The Stock Price Assumption
• Consider a stock whose price is S
• In a short period of time of length Dt, the
return on the stock is normally distributed:
S
S

  t ,  2 t 
where m is expected return and s is
volatility

27
The Expected Return
• The expected value of the stock price is S0emT
• The expected return on the stock is
m – s2/2 not m

This is because
ln[ E ( ST / S 0 )] and E[ln(ST / S 0 )]
are not the same

28
The Black-Scholes Formulas
(See chapter 13, pages 291-293)

c  S 0 N (d1 )  K e  rT N (d 2 )
p  K e  rT N (d 2 )  S 0 N ( d1 )
ln(S 0 / K )  (r   2 / 2)T
where d1 
 T
2
ln(S 0 / K )  (r   / 2)T
d2   d1   T
 T

29
The N(x) Function
• N(x) is the cumulative probability distribution
function for a standardized normal distribution
• N(x) is the probability that a normally
distributed variable with a mean of zero and a
standard deviation of 1 is less than x
• NORMSDIST in Excel

30
Example

31
Example

32

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