Topic 8: Option Markets and Valuation Flashcards

1
Q

In the money call and put

A
  • Call: market price>exercise price

- Put: exercise price>market price

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2
Q

Out of the money call and put

A
  • Call: market price < exercise price

- Put: exercise price < market price

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3
Q

At the money call and put

A
  • exercise price and asset price are equal
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4
Q

Payoffs and Profits at Expiration - Calls

A
  • 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
  • Payoff to Call Writer
    (ST - X) if ST >X
    0 if ST < X
  • Profit to Call Writer
    Payoff + Premium
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5
Q

Payoffs and Profits at Expiration - Puts

A
  • Payoffs to Put Holder
    0 if ST > X
    (X - ST) if ST < X
  • Profit to Put Holder
    Payoff - Premium
  • Payoffs to Put Writer
    0 if ST > X
    (X - ST) if ST < X
  • Profits to Put Writer
    Payoff + Premium
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6
Q

What is a protective put?

A
  • long the stock and long the put
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7
Q

What is a cover call?

A
  • own the stock and write a call
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8
Q

What is a collar?

A
  • Collars are the combination of buying stocks, buying put and writing calls
  • Suppose you are holding IBM, selling at $100. You can buy protective put with exercise price of $90, and write call option with exercise price $110. The two premiums may cancel out
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9
Q

What is a long straddle?

A
  • long call A, long put A (same exercise price A=X
  • When to use: If market is near A and you expect it to start moving but are not sure which way to move.
  • Profit: Profit open-ended in either direction. At
    expiration, break-even is at A, plus or minus cost
    of spread
  • Loss limited to cost of spread. Maximum
    loss incurred if market is at A at expiration
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10
Q

What is a short straddle?

A
  • Short call A, short put A (same exercise price A=X)
  • When to use: If market is near A and you expect market is stagnating. Because you are short options, you reap profits as they decay—as long as market remains near A
  • Profit: Profit maximized if market, at
    expiration, is at A. In call-put scenario,
    maximum profit is credit from establishing
    position; break-even is A plus or minus
    that amount
  • Loss: Loss potential open-ended in either
    direction. Position, therefore, must be
    closely monitored and readjusted to
    neutrality if market begins to drift away
    from A
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11
Q

What is a bull spread?

A
  • Bull spread: long call A, short call B; or long put A, short put B (A=X1, B=X2)
  • When to use: If you think the market will go up somewhat or at least is a bit more likely to rise than fall. Good position if you want to be in the market but are unsure of bullish expectations. This is the most popular bullish trade
  • Profit: Profit limited, reaching maximum if market
    ends at or above B at expiration. If call-vs.–call
    version (most common) used, break-even is at
    A + net cost of spread
  • Loss: What is gained by limiting profit potential is
    mainly a limit to loss if you guessed wrong on
    market. Maximum loss if market at expiration is
    at or below A. With call-vs.-call version,
    maximum loss is net cost of spread
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12
Q

What is a bear spread?

A
  • Bear spread: short call A, long call B; or short put A, long put B
  • When to use: If you think the market will fall somewhat or at least is a bit more likely to fall than rise. This is the most popular position among bears because it may be entered as a conservative trade when you are uncertain about bearish stance
  • Profit: Profit limited, reaching maximum at
    expiration if market ends at or below A. If put-vs.
    –put version (most common) used, break-even
    is at B - net cost of spread
  • Loss: By accepting limit to profits, you gain a
    limit to risk. Losses, at expiration, increase as
    market rises to B, where they stabilize. With putvs.-put version, maximum loss is net cost of
    spread
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