Investments, tenth edition


A. Cost flow when portfolio is established



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A. Cost flow when portfolio is established

  

 



Purchase 1,000 calls (X 5 90) @ $3.6202 

(option priced at implied volatility of 27%)

$ 3,620.20 cash outflow

   Write 1,589 calls (X 5 95) @ $2.3735 

   (option priced at implied volatility of 33%)

  3,771.50 cash inflow

  

  TOTAL



  $    151.30 net cash inflow

B. Option prices at implied volatility of 30%

   Stock Price:



89

90

91

   90-strike-price calls

$3.478

$3.997


$4.557

   95-strike-price calls

1.703

2.023


2.382

C. Value of portfolio after implied volatilities converge to 30%

   Stock Price:

89

90

91

      Value of 1,000 calls held

$3,478

$3,997


$4,557

   2 Value of 1,589 calls written

  2,705

  3,214


  3,785

  

   



TOTAL

$   773


$   782

$   772


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758 

P A R T   V I

  Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives

position, so that both options are priced at implied volatilities of 30%. You expect to 

profit from the increase in the value of the call purchased as well as from the decrease 

in the value of the call written. The option prices at 30% volatility are given in panel 

B of  Table 21.4  and the values of your position for various stock prices are presented 

in panel C. Although the profit or loss on each option is affected by the stock price, 

the value of the delta-neutral option portfolio is positive and essentially independent 

of the price of IBM. Moreover, we saw in panel A that the portfolio would have been 

established without ever requiring a cash outlay. You would have cash inflows both 

when you establish the portfolio  and  when you liquidate it after the implied volatilities 

converge to 30%. 

 This unusual profit opportunity arises because you have identified prices out of align-

ment. Such opportunities could not arise if prices were at equilibrium levels. By exploiting 

the pricing discrepancy using a delta-neutral strategy, you should earn profits regardless of 

the price movement in IBM stock. 

 Delta-neutral hedging strategies are also subject to practical problems, the most impor-

tant of which is the difficulty in assessing the proper volatility for the coming period. If the 

volatility estimate is incorrect, so will be the deltas, and the overall position will not truly 

be hedged. Moreover, option or option-plus-stock positions generally will not be neutral 

with respect to changes in volatility. For example, a put option hedged by a stock might be 

delta neutral, but it is not volatility neutral. Changes in the market assessments of volatility 

will affect the option price even if the stock price is unchanged. 

 These problems can be serious, because volatility estimates are never fully reliable. 

First, volatility cannot be observed directly and must be estimated from past data which 

imparts measurement error to the forecast. Second, we’ve seen that both historical and 

implied volatilities fluctuate over time. Therefore, we are always shooting at a moving 

target. Although delta-neutral positions are hedged against changes in the price of the 

underlying asset, they still are subject to  volatility risk,  the risk incurred from unpre-

dictable changes in volatility. The sensitivity of an option price to changes in volatility 

is called the option’s    vega    .  Thus, although delta-neutral option hedges might eliminate 

exposure to risk from fluctuations in the value of the underlying asset, they do not elimi-

nate volatility risk.   

    21.6 

Empirical Evidence on Option Pricing 

  The Black-Scholes option-pricing model has been subject to an enormous number of 

empirical tests. For the most part, the results of the studies have been positive in that the 

Black-Scholes model generates option values fairly close to the actual prices at which 

options trade. At the same time, some regular empirical failures of the model have been 

noted. 

 The biggest problem concerns volatility. If the model were accurate, the implied volatil-

ity of all options on a particular stock with the same expiration date would be equal—after 

all, the underlying asset and expiration date are the same for each option, so the volatility 

inferred from each also ought to be the same. But in fact, when one actually plots implied 

volatility as a function of exercise price, the typical results appear as in  Figure 21.15 , which 

treats S&P 500 index options as the underlying asset. Implied volatility steadily falls as the 

exercise price rises. Clearly, the Black-Scholes model is missing something.  

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Visit us at www

.mhhe.com/bkm

  C H A P T E R  

2 1


 Option 

Valuation

759

 Rubinstein  



19

 

 



 suggests that the prob-

lem with the model has to do with fears of 

a market crash like that of October 1987. 

The idea is that deep out-of-the-money puts 

would be nearly worthless if stock prices 

evolve smoothly, because the probabil-

ity of the stock falling by a large amount 

(and the put option thereby moving into 

the money) in a short time would be very 

small. But a possibility of a sudden large 

downward jump that could move the puts 

into the money, as in a market crash, would 

impart greater value to these options. Thus, 

the market might price these options as 

though there is a bigger chance of a large 

drop in the stock price than would be sug-

gested by the Black-Scholes assumptions. 

The result of the higher option price is a 

greater implied volatility derived from the 

Black-Scholes model.

 

 

Interestingly, Rubinstein points out 



that prior to the 1987 market crash, plots 

of implied volatility like the one in  Figure 21.15  were relatively flat, consistent with the 

notion that the market was then less attuned to fears of a crash. However, postcrash plots 

have been consistently downward sloping, exhibiting a shape often called the  option smirk.

When we use option-pricing models that allow for more general stock price distributions, 

including crash risk and random changes in volatility, they generate downward-sloping 

implied volatility curves similar to the one observed in  Figure 21.15 .  

20

  



      

0.84


0.89

0.94


0.99

1.04


1.09

Implied V

olatility (%)

Ratio of Exercise Price to Current Value of Index

25

20

15



10

5

0




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