7. The common stock of the P.U.T.T. Corporation has been trading in a narrow price range for the
past month, and you are convinced it is going to break far out of that range in the next 3 months.
You do not know whether it will go up or down, however. The current price of the stock is $100
per share, and the price of a 3-month call option at an exercise price of $100 is $10.
a. If the risk-free interest rate is 10% per year, what must be the price of a 3-month put option on
P.U.T.T. stock at an exercise price of $100? (The stock pays no dividends.)
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712
P A R T V I
Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives
b. What would be a simple options strategy to exploit your conviction about the stock price’s
future movements? How far would it have to move in either direction for you to make a
profit on your initial investment?
8. The common stock of the C.A.L.L. Corporation has been trading in a narrow range around $50
per share for months, and you believe it is going to stay in that range for the next 3 months. The
price of a 3-month put option with an exercise price of $50 is $4.
a. If the risk-free interest rate is 10% per year, what must be the price of a 3-month call option
on C.A.L.L. stock at an exercise price of $50 if it is at the money? (The stock pays no
dividends.)
b. What would be a simple options strategy using a put and a call to exploit your conviction
about the stock price’s future movement? What is the most money you can make on this
position? How far can the stock price move in either direction before you lose money?
c. How can you create a position involving a put, a call, and riskless lending that would have
the same payoff structure as the stock at expiration? What is the net cost of establishing that
position now?
9. You are a portfolio manager who uses options positions to customize the risk profile of your
clients. In each case, what strategy is best given your client’s objective?
a.
•
Performance to date: Up 16%.
•
Client objective: Earn at least 15%.
•
Your scenario: Good chance of large gains or large losses between now and end of year.
i. Long straddle.
ii. Long bullish spread.
iii. Short straddle.
b.
•
Performance to date: Up 16%.
•
Client objective: Earn at least 15%.
•
Your scenario: Good chance of large losses between now and end of year.
i. Long put options.
ii. Short call options.
iii. Long call options.
10. An investor purchases a stock for $38 and a put for $.50 with a strike price of $35. The inves-
tor sells a call for $.50 with a strike price of $40. What is the maximum profit and loss for this
position? Draw the profit and loss diagram for this strategy as a function of the stock price at
expiration.
11. Imagine that you are holding 5,000 shares of stock, currently selling at $40 per share. You are
ready to sell the shares but would prefer to put off the sale until next year for tax reasons. If
you continue to hold the shares until January, however, you face the risk that the stock will drop
in value before year-end. You decide to use a collar to limit downside risk without laying out
a good deal of additional funds. January call options with a strike of $35 are selling at $2, and
January puts with a strike price of $45 are selling at $3. What will be the value of your portfolio
in January (net of the proceeds from the options) if the stock price ends up at: ( a ) $30, ( b ) $40,
or ( c ) $50? Compare these proceeds to what you would realize if you simply continued to hold
the shares.
12. In this problem, we derive the put-call parity relationship for European options on stocks that
pay dividends before option expiration. For simplicity, assume that the stock makes one divi-
dend payment of $ D per share at the expiration date of the option.
a. What is the value of a stock-plus-put position on the expiration date of the option?
b. Now consider a portfolio comprising a call option and a zero-coupon bond with the same
maturity date as the option and with face value ( X 1 D ). What is the value of this portfolio
on the option expiration date? You should find that its value equals that of the stock-plus-put
portfolio regardless of the stock price.
c. What is the cost of establishing the two portfolios in parts ( a ) and ( b )? Equate the costs of
these portfolios, and you will derive the put-call parity relationship, Equation 20.2.
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C H A P T E R
2 0
Options Markets: Introduction
713
13.
a. A butterfly spread is the purchase of one call at exercise price
X
1
, the sale of two calls at
exercise price
X
2
, and the purchase of one call at exercise price X
3
. X
1
is less than X
2
, and
X
2
is less than X
3
by equal amounts, and all calls have the same expiration date. Graph the
payoff diagram to this strategy.
b. A vertical combination is the purchase of a call with exercise price X
2
and a put with exercise
price
X
1
, with X
2
greater than X
1
. Graph the payoff to this strategy.
14. A bearish spread is the purchase of a call with exercise price
X
2
and the sale of a call with
exercise price
X
1
, with X
2
greater than X
1
. Graph the payoff to this strategy and compare it to
Figure 20.10 .
15. Joseph Jones, a manager at Computer Science, Inc. (CSI), received 10,000 shares of company
stock as part of his compensation package. The stock currently sells at $40 a share. Joseph
would like to defer selling the stock until the next tax year. In January, however, he will need to
sell all his holdings to provide for a down payment on his new house. Joseph is worried about
the price risk involved in keeping his shares. At current prices, he would receive $400,000 for
the stock. If the value of his stock holdings falls below $350,000, his ability to come up with the
necessary down payment would be jeopardized. On the other hand, if the stock value rises to
$450,000, he would be able to maintain a small cash reserve even after making the down pay-
ment. Joseph considers three investment strategies:
a. Strategy A is to write January call options on the CSI shares with strike price $45. These
calls are currently selling for $3 each.
b. Strategy B is to buy January put options on CSI with strike price $35. These options also sell
for $3 each.
c. Strategy C is to establish a zero-cost collar by writing the January calls and buying the
January puts.
Evaluate each of these strategies with respect to Joseph’s investment goals. What are the advan-
tages and disadvantages of each? Which would you recommend?
16. Use the spreadsheet from the Excel Application boxes on spreads and straddles (available at
www.mhhe.com/bkm ; link to Chapter 20 material) to answer these questions.
a. Plot the payoff and profit diagrams to a straddle position with an exercise (strike) price of
$130. Assume the options are priced as they are in the Excel Application.
b. Plot the payoff and profit diagrams to a bullish spread position with exercise (strike) prices
of $120 and $130. Assume the options are priced as they are in the Excel Application.
17. Some agricultural price support systems have guaranteed farmers a minimum price for their
output. Describe the program provisions as an option. What is the asset? The exercise price?
18. In what ways is owning a corporate bond similar to writing a put option? A call option?
19. An executive compensation scheme might provide a manager a bonus of $1,000 for every dollar
by which the company’s stock price exceeds some cutoff level. In what way is this arrangement
equivalent to issuing the manager call options on the firm’s stock?
20. Consider the following options portfolio. You write a January expiration call option on IBM
with exercise price $195. You write a January IBM put option with exercise price $190.
a. Graph the payoff of this portfolio at option expiration as a function of IBM’s stock price at
that time.
b. What will be the profit/loss on this position if IBM is selling at $198 on the option expiration
date? What if IBM is selling at $205? Use The Wall Street Journal listing from Figure 20.1
to answer this question.
c. At what two stock prices will you just break even on your investment?
d. What kind of “bet” is this investor making; that is, what must this investor believe about
IBM’s stock price to justify this position?
21. Consider the following portfolio. You write a put option with exercise price 90 and buy a put
option on the same stock with the same expiration date with exercise price 95.
a. Plot the value of the portfolio at the expiration date of the options.
b. On the same graph, plot the profit of the portfolio. Which option must cost more?
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