Excel Questions
1. Find the value of the call and put options using the param-
eters given in this box but changing the standard deviation
to .25. What happens to the value of each option?
2. What is implied volatility if the call option is selling for $9?
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Chapter 21- Black-Scholes Option Pricing
Call Valuation & Call Time Premiums
Standard deviation (
σ)
Variance (annual,
σ
2
)
Time to expiration (years, T)
Risk-free rate (annual, r)
Current stock price (S
0
)
Exercise price (X)
Dividend yield (annual,
δ)
d
1
d
2
N(d
1
)
N(d
2
)
Black-Scholes call value
Black-Scholes put value
Intrinsic value of call
Time value of call
Intrinsic value of put
Time value of put
0.27830
0.07745
0.50
6.00%
$100.00
$105.00
0.00%
0.0029095
−0.193878
0.50116
0.42314
$6.99992
$8.89670
$0.00000
6.99992
$5.00000
3.89670
A
B
C
D
Standard
Deviation
Call
Option
Value
0.15
0.18
0.20
0.23
0.25
0.28
0.30
0.33
0.35
0.38
0.40
0.43
0.45
0.48
0.50
E
7.000
3.388
4.089
4.792
5.497
6.202
6.907
7.612
8.317
9.022
9.726
10.429
11.132
11.834
12.536
13.236
F
G
Standard
Deviation
Call
Time
Value
H
I
J
Stock
Price
Call
Option
Value
$60
$65
$70
$75
$80
$85
$90
$95
$100
$105
$110
$115
$120
$125
$130
$135.00
K
7.000
0.017
0.061
0.179
0.440
0.935
1.763
3.014
4.750
7.000
9.754
12.974
16.602
20.572
24.817
29.275
33.893
L
M
Stock
Price
Call
Time
Value
$60
$65
$70
$75
$80
$85
$90
$95
$100
$105
$110
$115
$120
$125
$130
$135
N
7.000
0.017
0.061
0.179
0.440
0.935
1.763
3.014
4.750
7.000
9.754
7.974
6.602
5.572
4.817
4.275
3.893
0.150
0.175
0.200
0.225
0.250
0.275
0.300
0.325
0.350
0.375
0.400
0.425
0.450
0.475
0.500
7.000
3.388
4.089
4.792
5.497
6.202
6.907
7.612
8.317
9.022
9.726
10.429
11.132
11.834
12.536
13.236
Enter data
Value calculated
See comment
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C H A P T E R
2 1
Option
Valuation
749
While the protective put is
a simple and convenient way
to achieve portfolio insurance ,
that is, to limit the worst-case
portfolio rate of return, there are
practical difficulties in trying
to insure a portfolio of stocks.
First, unless the investor’s port-
folio corresponds to a standard
market index for which puts are
traded, a put option on the port-
folio will not be available for
purchase. And if index puts are
used to protect a non-indexed
portfolio, tracking error can
result. For example, if the port-
folio falls in value while the
market index rises, the put will
fail to provide the intended pro-
tection. Moreover, the maturi-
ties of traded options may not match the investor’s horizon. Therefore, rather than using
option strategies, investors may use trading strategies that mimic the payoff to a protective
put option.
Here is the general idea. Even if a put option on the desired portfolio does not exist, a
theoretical option-pricing model (such as the Black-Scholes model) can be used to deter-
mine how that option’s price would respond to the portfolio’s value if it did trade. For
example, if stock prices were to fall, the put option would increase in value. The option
model could quantify this relationship. The net exposure of the (hypothetical) protective
put portfolio to swings in stock prices is the sum of the exposures of the two components
of the portfolio, the stock and the put. The net exposure of the portfolio equals the equity
exposure less the (offsetting) put option exposure.
We can create “synthetic” protective put positions by holding a quantity of stocks with
the same net exposure to market swings as the hypothetical protective put position. The
key to this strategy is the option delta, or hedge ratio, that is, the change in the price of the
protective put option per change in the value of the underlying stock portfolio.
Change in Value
of Protected Position
Change in Value
of Underlying Asset
2P
0
0
Cost of Put
Figure 21.10
Profit on a protective put strategy
Suppose a portfolio is currently valued at $100 million. An at-the-money put option
on the portfolio might have a hedge ratio or delta of 2 .6, meaning the option’s value
swings $.60 for every dollar change in portfolio value, but in an opposite direction. Sup-
pose the stock portfolio falls in value by 2%. The profit on a hypothetical protective put
position (if the put existed) would be as follows (in millions of dollars):
Loss on stocks:
2% of $100 5 $2.00
Gain on put:
.6 3 $2.00 5 1.20
Net
loss
5 $ .80
Example 21.7
Synthetic Protective Put Options
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750
P A R T V I
Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives
The challenge with this procedure is that deltas constantly change.
Figure 21.11
shows that as the stock price falls, the magnitude of the appropriate hedge ratio increases.
Therefore, market declines require extra hedging, that is, additional conversion of equity
into cash. This constant updating of the hedge ratio is called dynamic hedging (alterna-
tively, delta hedging).
Dynamic hedging is one reason portfolio insurance has been said to contribute to mar-
ket volatility. Market declines trigger additional sales of stock as portfolio insurers strive to
increase their hedging. These additional sales
are seen as reinforcing or exaggerating mar-
ket downturns.
In practice, portfolio insurers often do
not actually buy or sell stocks directly when
they update their hedge positions. Instead,
they minimize trading costs by buying or
selling stock index futures as a substitute
for sale of the stocks themselves. As you
will see in the next chapter, stock prices and
index futures prices usually are very tightly
linked by cross-market arbitrageurs so that
futures transactions can be used as reliable
proxies for stock transactions. Instead of
selling equities based on the put option’s
delta, insurers will sell an equivalent number
of futures contracts.
17
Several portfolio insurers suffered great set-
backs during the market crash of October 19,
1987, when the market suffered an unprece-
dented 1-day loss of about 20%. A description
We create the synthetic option position by selling a proportion of shares equal to the
put option’s delta (i.e., selling 60% of the shares) and placing the proceeds in risk-free
T-bills. The rationale is that the hypothetical put option would have offset 60% of any
change in the stock portfolio’s value, so one must reduce portfolio risk directly by sell-
ing 60% of the equity and putting the proceeds into a risk-free asset. Total return on a
synthetic protective put position with $60 million in risk-free investments such as T-bills
and $40 million in equity is
Loss on stocks:
2% of $40 5 $.80
1
Loss on bills:
5 0
Net
loss
5 $.80
The synthetic and actual protective put positions have equal returns. We conclude
that if you sell a proportion of shares equal to the put option’s delta and place the
proceeds in cash equivalents, your exposure to the stock market will equal that of the
desired protective put position.
0
Value of a Put (P)
S
0
Low Slope
5
Low Hedge Ratio
Higher Slope
5
High Hedge Ratio
Figure 21.11
Hedge ratios change as the stock price
fluctuates
17
Notice, however, that the use of index futures reintroduces the problem of tracking error between the portfolio
and the market index.
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C H A P T E R
2 1
Option
Valuation
751
of what happened then should let you appreciate the complexities of applying a seemingly
straightforward hedging concept.
1. Market volatility at the crash was much greater than ever encountered before. Put
option deltas based on historical experience were too low; insurers underhedged,
held too much equity, and suffered excessive losses.
2. Prices moved so fast that insurers could not keep up with the necessary rebalancing.
They were “chasing deltas” that kept getting away from them. The futures market
also saw a “gap” opening, where the opening price was nearly 10% below the previ-
ous day’s close. The price dropped before insurers could update their hedge ratios.
3. Execution problems were severe. First, current market prices were unavailable, with
trade execution and the price quotation system hours behind, which made computa-
tion of correct hedge ratios impossible. Moreover, trading in stocks and stock futures
ceased during some periods. The continuous rebalancing capability that is essential
for a viable insurance program vanished during the precipitous market collapse.
4. Futures prices traded at steep discounts to their proper levels compared to reported
stock prices, thereby making the sale of futures (as a proxy for equity sales) seem
expensive. Although you will see in the next chapter that stock index futures prices
normally exceed the value of the stock index, Figure 21.12 shows that on October 19,
futures sold far below the stock index level. When some insurers gambled that the
futures price would recover to its usual premium over the stock index, and chose to
defer sales, they remained underhedged. As the market fell farther, their portfolios
experienced substantial losses.
Although most observers at the time believed that the portfolio insurance industry
would never recover from the market crash, delta hedging is still alive and well on Wall
Street. Dynamic hedges are widely used by large firms to hedge potential losses from
options positions. For example, the nearby box notes that when Microsoft ended its
employee stock option program and J. P. Morgan purchased many already-issued options
0
10
210
220
230
240
10
11
12
1
2
3
4 10
11
12
1
2
3
4
October 19
October 20
Figure 21.12
S&P 500 cash-to-futures spread in points at 15-minute intervals
Note: Trading in futures contracts halted between 12:15 and 1:05.
Source: The Wall Street Journal. Reprinted by permission of The Wall Street Journal, © 1987 Dow Jones &
Company, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide.
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752
of Microsoft employees, it was widely expected that Morgan would protect its options
position by selling shares in Microsoft in accord with a delta hedging strategy.
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