1 / 32

FINANCE IN A CANADIAN SETTING Sixth Canadian Edition

FINANCE IN A CANADIAN SETTING Sixth Canadian Edition. Lusztig, Cleary, Schwab. CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Options. Learning Objectives. 1. Explain the difference between a call option and a put option. 2. Identify four advantages of options. 3. Describe how options can be used to hedge a portfolio.

rossa
Télécharger la présentation

FINANCE IN A CANADIAN SETTING Sixth Canadian Edition

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FINANCE IN A CANADIAN SETTINGSixth Canadian Edition Lusztig, Cleary, Schwab

  2. CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Options

  3. Learning Objectives 1. Explain the difference between a call option and a put option. 2. Identify four advantages of options. 3. Describe how options can be used to hedge a portfolio. 4. Describe the factors that affect option prices. 5. Discuss the five aspects of the Black-Scholes option-pricing model.

  4. Introduction • Various types of options and related financial instruments have emerged as tools financial managers use to control their firms risk exposure • Derivative securities – derive their value from the value of an underlying asset • Options – contracts that grant the holder the right to buy or sell a particular asset at a given price on or before a specified date

  5. General Concepts • An option usually contains the following elements: 1. The right to buy or sell a security • Call options – grants the right to buy • Put options – grants the right to sell 2. A specified price at which the option can be exercised known as the strike or exercise price 3. Limited time frame • Expiration date – the date at which an unexercised option becomes void

  6. General Concepts • Two types of equity options: • American options – exercisable any time up to or on the expiration date • European options – exercised only on expiration date • Options trade on organized exchanges or in the OTC market • The majority of options are traded on: • Montreal exchange (Canada) • American exchange and CBOT (US)

  7. General Concepts • Clearing houses are used to maintain the integrity of the option markets • CDCC (Canada) • DCC (US) • US option markets are approximately 40 times larger than Canada’s • Stock options for any given month expire the third Friday of every month

  8. General Concepts • Writing options: • generally , the options investors buy are written by other investors • Leverage: • options are popular because of the high return potential, but there is downside magnification that must be consider • Hedging: • options are good for managing corporate risk • Example: locking in prices for raw commodities

  9. Basic Option Characteristics • Terminology describing the relationship between the exercise price of the option and current stock price includes: • In the money – When the price of the stock (S) exceeds the exercise price of a call (E) • Out of the money – when the stock price (S) is less than the exercise price (E) • At the money – when the exercise price (E) equals the stock price (S)

  10. Intrinsic Values • Intrinsic value – an options’ minimum value • If a call is “in the money”, it has an immediate intrinsic value equal to the difference between the market price of the stock and the exercise value of the option • Intrinsic value of a call = Maximum {(S0 - E), 0} • Puts work in reverse • Intrinsic value of a put = Maximum {(E - S0), 0}

  11. Payoffs From Basic Option Positions • To understand the characteristics of options we examine their value at expiration ST = the value of the stock at expiration date T E = the exercise price of the option • Buying a call Pay off to a call buyer at expiration = ST - E if St > E = 0 if ST E

  12. Payoffs From Basic Option Positions Payoff Profiles for Call and Put Options at Expiration

  13. BCE Inc. Call Option Example BCE Inc. Nov. call with exercise price of $30 is selling for $5.75 BCE stock at expiration $20 25 30 35 40 Call value at expiration $ 0 0 0 5 10 If at expiration BCE stock is trading at $40 then: Net profit = option payoff - option cost = $10 - $5.75 = $4.25 Up to $30 the call option investor’s maximum loss is $5.75 The breakeven point for the investor is at $35.75

  14. BCE Inc. Call Option Example Profit and Losses to the Buyer of a Call Option

  15. Selling (Writing) a Call • A naked or uncovered option writer is one who does not hold a position in the underlying asset • Naked call option writers incur losses if the stock price increases Payoff to naked call writer at expiration = -(ST - E) if ST  E = 0 if ST  E • The net profit line for a naked call writer is a mirror image of a call buyer

  16. Selling (Writing) a Call Profit and Losses to the Writer of a Call Option

  17. Buying a Put Option • Put option makes money when stock price declines Payoff to put buyer = 0 if ST E = E - ST if ST  E

  18. BCE Inc. Put Option Example BCE Inc. Nov. put with exercise price of $30 is selling for $0.30 BCE stock at expiration $20 25 30 35 40 Call value at expiration $10 5 0 0 0 If at expiration BCE stock is trading at $20 then: Net profit = option payoff - option cost = $10 - $0.30 = $9.70 The breakeven point for the investor is at $29.70

  19. BCE Inc. Put Option Example Profit and Losses to the Buyer of a Put Option

  20. Selling (Writing) a Put • The payoff pattern for a naked put investor is the mirror image of a put buyer Payoff to a naked put writer at expiration: = 0 if ST E = -(E - ST) if ST E • The writer is obligated to buy the stock at the specified price during the life of the put contract • If the stock price falls the put buyer may buy the stock and exercise the put by making the writer pay the specified price

  21. Selling (Writing) a Put Profit and Losses to the Writer of a Put Option

  22. Protective Puts • Involves buying stock and a put option for the same company • The put acts as insurance against a decline in the underlying stock price to limit losses • Profit is infinite but reduced by the amount by the cost of the put option

  23. Protective Puts The payoff profile: Payoff of stock ST EST  E ST ST + Payoff of put E - ST0 E ST

  24. Protective Puts Payoff Profile and Profit/Losses for a Protective Put Position

  25. Covered Calls • Covered call– involves buying a stock and the simultaneous sale (or writing) of a call on that stock • The position is covered because the writer owns the stock and it could be delivered if called • The gains are limited if the stock rises, in exchange for cushioning the loss by the amount of the call premium if the stock declines

  26. Covered Calls The payoff profile: Payoff of stock ST EST E ST ST + Payoff of put E - ST0 E ST

  27. Covered Calls Payoff Profiles for a Covered Call Position

  28. Option Valuation • Option premiums almost never fall below their intrinsic value because of arbitrageurs • Arbitrageurs – seek to earn profits without assuming risk by constructing riskless hedges • Options almost always exceed intrinsic value due to the time value

  29. Factors Affecting Option Prices Profit and Losses to the Writer of a Call Option

  30. Summary 1. An option is a contract. It either grants the holder the right to purchase (call option) or to sell (put option) a given asset at a particular price for a specified time period. 2. Buyers of calls expect the underlying stock to perform in the opposite direction from the expectations of buyers. 3. Although options have a value, it is a net zero transaction – what the holder gains, the other loses.

  31. Summary 4. Options provide investors with opportunity to create leverage, to know their maximum loss in advance, and to expand their investment opportunity set.

  32. Summary 5. Option prices are affected by: • underlying stock price • exercise price • time expiration • underlying stock volatility • interest rates • and cash dividends paid on the underlying assets

More Related