Week 6

mloi01
IPPTChap020.ppt

INVESTMENTS | BODIE, KANE, MARCUS

Copyright © 2014 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.

Chapter Twenty

Options Markets: Introduction

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Options

  • Derivatives are securities that get their value from the price of other securities.
  • Can be powerful tools for hedging and speculation.
  • Options are traded both on organized exchanges and OTC.

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The Option Contract: Calls

  • A call option gives its holder the right to buy an asset:
  • At the exercise or strike price
  • On or before the expiration date
  • Exercise the option to buy the underlying asset if market value > strike price.

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The Option Contract: Puts

  • A put option gives its holder the right to sell an asset:
  • At the exercise or strike price
  • On or before the expiration date
  • Exercise the option to sell the underlying asset if market value < strike price.

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The Option Contract

  • The purchase price of the option is called the premium.
  • Sellers (writers) of options receive premium income.
  • If holder exercises the option, the option writer must make (call) or take (put) delivery of the underlying asset.

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Example 20.1 Profit and Loss on a Call

  • A January 2010 call on IBM with an exercise price of $130 was selling on December 2, 2009, for $2.18.
  • The option expires on the third Friday of the month, or January 15, 2010.
  • If IBM remains below $130, the call will expire worthless.

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Example 20.1 Profit and Loss on a Call

  • Suppose IBM sells for $197 on the expiration date.
  • Option value = stock price-exercise price

$197- $195= $2

  • Profit = Final value – Original investment

$2.00 - $3.65 = -$1.65

  • Option will be exercised to offset loss of premium.
  • Call will not be strictly profitable unless IBM’s price exceeds $198.65 (strike + premium) by expiration.

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Example 20.2 Profit and Loss on a Put

  • Consider a February 2013 put on IBM with an exercise price of $195, selling on January 18, for $5.00.
  • Option holder can sell a share of IBM for $195 at any time until February 15.
  • If IBM goes above $195, the put is worthless.

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Example 20.2 Profit and Loss on a Put

  • Suppose IBM’s price at expiration is $188.
  • Value at expiration = exercise price – stock price:

$195 - $188 = $7

  • Investor’s profit:

$7.00 - $5.00 = $2.00

  • Holding period return = 40% over 28 days!

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Market and Exercise Price Relationships

In the Money - exercise of the option produces a positive cash flow

Call: exercise price < asset price

Put: exercise price > asset price

Out of the Money - exercise of the option would not be profitable

Call: asset price < exercise price.

Put: asset price > exercise price.

At the Money - exercise price and asset price are equal

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American vs. European Options

American - the option can be exercised at any time before expiration or maturity

European - the option can only be exercised on the expiration or maturity date

  • In the U.S., most options are American style, except for currency and stock index options.

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Different Types of Options

  • Stock Options
  • Index Options
  • Futures Options
  • Foreign Currency Options
  • Interest Rate Options

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Payoffs and Profits at Expiration - Calls

Notation

Stock Price = ST Exercise Price = X

Payoff to Call Holder

(ST - X) if ST >X

0 if ST < X

Profit to Call Holder

Payoff - Purchase Price

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Payoffs and Profits at Expiration - Calls

Payoff to Call Writer

- (ST - X) if ST >X

0 if ST < X

Profit to Call Writer

Payoff + Premium

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Figure 20.2 Payoff and Profit to Call Option at Expiration

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Figure 20.3 Payoff and Profit to Call Writers at Expiration

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Payoffs and Profits at Expiration - Puts

Payoffs to Put Holder

0 if ST > X

(X - ST) if ST < X

Profit to Put Holder

Payoff - Premium

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Payoffs and Profits at Expiration – Puts

Payoffs to Put Writer

0 if ST > X

-(X - ST) if ST < X

Profits to Put Writer

Payoff + Premium

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Figure 20.4 Payoff and Profit to Put Option at Expiration

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Option versus Stock Investments

  • Could a call option strategy be preferable to a direct stock purchase?
  • Suppose you think a stock, currently selling for $100, will appreciate.
  • A 6-month call costs $10 (contract size is 100 shares).
  • You have $10,000 to invest.

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Option versus Stock Investments

  • Strategy A: Invest entirely in stock. Buy 100 shares, each selling for $100.
  • Strategy B: Invest entirely in at-the-money call options. Buy 1,000 calls, each selling for $10. (This would require 10 contracts, each for 100 shares.)
  • Strategy C: Purchase 100 call options for $1,000. Invest your remaining $9,000 in 6-month T-bills, to earn 3% interest. The bills will be worth $9,270 at expiration.

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Option versus Stock Investment

Investment Strategy Investment

Equity only Buy stock @ 100 100 shares $10,000

Options only Buy calls @ 10 1000 options $10,000

Leveraged Buy calls @ 10 100 options $1,000

equity Buy T-bills @ 3% $9,000

Yield

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Strategy Payoffs

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Figure 20.5 Rate of Return to Three Strategies

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Strategy Conclusions

  • Figure 20.5 shows that the all-option portfolio, B, responds more than proportionately to changes in stock value; it is levered.
  • Portfolio C, T-bills plus calls, shows the insurance value of options.
  • C ‘s T-bill position cannot be worth less than $9270.
  • Some return potential is sacrificed to limit downside risk.

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Protective Put Conclusions

  • Puts can be used as insurance against stock price declines.
  • Protective puts lock in a minimum portfolio value.
  • The cost of the insurance is the put premium.
  • Options can be used for risk management, not just for speculation.

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Covered Calls

  • Purchase stock and write calls against it.
  • Call writer gives up any stock value above X in return for the initial premium.
  • If you planned to sell the stock when the price rises above X anyway, the call imposes “sell discipline.”

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Table 20.2 Value of a Covered Call Position at Expiration

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Figure 20.8 Value of a Covered Call Position at Expiration

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Straddle

  • Long straddle: Buy call and put with same exercise price and maturity.
  • The straddle is a bet on volatility.
  • To make a profit, the change in stock price must exceed the cost of both options.
  • You need a strong change in stock price in either direction.
  • The writer of a straddle is betting the stock price will not change much.

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Table 20.3 Value of a Straddle Position at Option Expiration

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Figure 20.9 Value of a Straddle at Expiration

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Spreads

  • A spread is a combination of two or more calls (or two or more puts) on the same stock with differing exercise prices or times to maturity.
  • Some options are bought, whereas others are sold, or written.
  • A bullish spread is a way to profit from stock price increases.

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Table 20.4 Value of a Bullish Spread Position at Expiration

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Figure 20.10 Value of a Bullish Spread Position at Expiration

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Collars

  • A collar is an options strategy that brackets the value of a portfolio between two bounds.
  • Limit downside risk by selling upside potential.
  • Buy a protective put to limit downside risk of a position.
  • Fund put purchase by writing a covered call.
  • Net outlay for options is approximately zero.

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Put-Call Parity

  • The call-plus-bond portfolio (on left) must cost the same as the stock-plus-put portfolio (on right):

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Put Call Parity - Disequilibrium Example

Stock Price = 110 Call Price = 17

Put Price = 5 Risk Free = 5%

Maturity = 1 yr X = 105

117 > 115

Since the leveraged equity is less expensive, acquire the low cost alternative and sell the high cost alternative

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Table 20.5 Arbitrage Strategy

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Option-like Securities

  • Callable Bonds
  • Convertible Securities
  • Warrants
  • Collateralized Loans

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