Title: Derivative securities
1CHAPTER 18Derivatives and Risk Management
- Derivative securities
- Fundamentals of risk management
- Using derivatives to reduce interest rate risk
2Why might stockholders be indifferent to whether
or not a firm reduces the volatility of its cash
flows?
- If volatility is due to systematic risk, it can
be eliminated by diversifying investors
portfolios.
3Reasons Risk Management Might Increase the Value
of a Corporation
- Increase their use of debt.
- Maintain their optimal capital budget.
- Avoid financial distress costs.
- Utilize their comparative advantages in hedging,
compared to investors. - Reduce the risks and costs of borrowing.
4- Reduce the higher taxes that result from
fluctuating earnings. - Initiate compensation programs to reward managers
for achieving stable earnings.
5What is an option?
- An option is a contract that gives its holder the
right, but not the obligation, to buy (or sell)
an asset at some predetermined price within a
specified period of time.
6What is the single most important characteristic
of an option?
- It does not obligate its owner to take any
action. It merely gives the owner the right to
buy or sell an asset.
7Option Terminology
- Call option An option to buy a specified number
of shares of a security within some future
period. - Put option An option to sell a specified number
of shares of a security within some future
period. - Exercise (or strike) price The price stated in
the option contract at which the security can be
bought or sold.
8- Option price The market price of the option
contract. - Expiration date The date the option matures.
- Exercise value The value of a call option if it
were exercised today Current stock price -
Strike price.
9- Covered option A call option written against
stock held in an investors portfolio. - Naked (uncovered) option An option sold without
the stock to back it up. - In-the-money call A call option whose exercise
price is less than the current price of the
under-lying stock.
10- Out-of-the-money call A call option whose
exercise price exceeds the current stock price. - LEAPS Long-term Equity AnticiPation Securities
are similar to conventional options except that
they are long-term options with maturities of up
to 2 1/2 years.
11Consider the following data
Stock Price Call Option Price 25 3.00
30 7.50 35 12.00 40 16.50
45 21.00 50 25.50 Exercise price 25.
12Create a table which shows (a) stock price, (b)
strike price, (c) exercise value, (d) option
price, and (e) premium of option price over the
exercise value.
- Price of Strike Exercise Value
- Stock (a) Price (b) of Option (a) (b)
- 25.00 25.00 0.00
- 30.00 25.00 5.00
- 35.00 25.00 10.00
- 40.00 25.00 15.00
- 45.00 25.00 20.00
- 50.00 25.00 25.00
13Table (Continued)
- Exercise Value Mkt. Price Premium
- of Option (c) of Option (d) (d)
(c) - 0.00 3.00 3.00
- 5.00 7.50
2.50 - 10.00 12.00 2.00
- 15.00 16.50 1.50
- 20.00 21.00 1.00
- 25.00 25.50 0.50
14What happens to the premium of the option price
over the exercise value as the stock price rises?
- The premium of the option price over the exercise
value declines as the stock price increases. - This is due to the declining degree of leverage
provided by options as the underlying stock price
increases, and the greater loss potential of
options at higher option prices.
15Call Premium Diagram
Option value
30 25 20 15 10 5
Market price
Exercise value
5 10 15 20 25 30 35
40 45 50
Stock Price
16What are the assumptions of the Black-Scholes
Option Pricing Model?
- The stock underlying the call option provides no
dividends during the call options life. - There are no transactions costs for the
sale/purchase of either the stock or the option. - kRF is known and constant during the options
life.
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17- Security buyers may borrow any fraction of the
purchase price at the short-term, risk-free rate. - No penalty for short selling and sellers receive
immediately full cash proceeds at todays price. - Call option can be exercised only on its
expiration date. - Security trading takes place in continuous time,
and stock prices move randomly in continuous time.
18What are the three equations that make up the OPM?
- V PN(d1) Xe -kRFtN(d2).
- d1 .
- s t
- d2 d1 s t.
ln(P/X) kRF (s2/2)t
19What is the value of the following call option
according to the OPM?Assume P 27 X 25
kRF 6t 0.5 years s2 0.11
- V 27N(d1) 25e-(0.06)(0.5)N(d2).
- ln(27/25) (0.06 0.11/2)(0.5)
- (0.3317)(0.7071)
- 0.5736.
- d2 d1 (0.3317)(0.7071) d1 0.2345
- 0.5736 0.2345 0.3391.
d1
20N(d1) N(0.5736) 0.5000 0.2168
0.7168. N(d2) N(0.3391) 0.5000 0.1327
0.6327. Note Values obtained from Table A-5 in
text. V 27(0.7168) 25e-0.03(0.6327)
19.3536 25(0.97045)(0.6327) 4.0036.
21What impact do the following para- meters have on
a call options value?
- Current stock price Call option value increases
as the current stock price increases. - Exercise price As the exercise price increases,
a call options value decreases.
22- Option period As the expiration date is
lengthened, a call options value increases (more
chance of becoming in the money.) - Risk-free rate Call options value tends to
increase as kRF increases (reduces the PV of the
exercise price). - Stock return variance Option value increases
with variance of the underlying stock (more
chance of becoming in the money).
23What is corporate risk management?
- Corporate risk management relates to the
management of unpredictable events that would
have adverse consequences for the firm.
24Why is corporate risk management important to all
firms?
- All firms face risks, but the lower those risks
can be made, the more valuable the firm, other
things held constant. Of course, risk reduction
has a cost.
25Definitions of Different Types of Risk
- Speculative risks Those that offer the chance
of a gain as well as a loss. - Pure risks Those that offer only the prospect
of a loss. - Demand risks Those associated with the demand
for a firms products or services. - Input risks Those associated with a firms
input costs.
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26- Financial risks Those that result from
financial transactions. - Property risks Those associated with loss of a
firms productive assets. - Personnel risk Risks that result from human
actions. - Environmental risk Risk associated with
polluting the environment. - Liability risks Connected with product,
service, or employee liability. - Insurable risks Those that typically can be
covered by insurance.
27What are the three steps of corporate risk
management?
- Step 1. Identify the risks faced by the firm.
- Step 2. Measure the potential impact of the
identified risks. - Step 3. Decide how each relevant risk should be
handled.
28What are some actions that companies can take to
minimize or reduce risk exposure?
- Transfer risk to an insurance company by paying
periodic premiums. - Transfer functions that produce risk to third
parties. - Purchase derivative contracts to reduce input and
financial risks.
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29- Take actions to reduce the probability of
occurrence of adverse events. - Take actions to reduce the magnitude of the loss
associated with adverse events. - Avoid the activities that give rise to risk.
30What is a financial risk exposure?
- Financial risk exposure refers to the risk
inherent in the financial markets due to price
fluctuations. - Example A firm holds a portfolio of bonds,
interest rates rise, and the value of the bonds
falls.
31Financial Risk Management Concepts
- Derivative Security whose value stems or is
derived from the values of other assets. Swaps,
options, and futures are used to manage financial
risk exposures. - Futures Contracts that call for the purchase or
sale of a financial (or real) asset at some
future date, but at a price determined today.
Futures (and other derivatives) can be used
either as highly leveraged speculations or to
hedge and thus reduce risk.
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32- Hedging Generally conducted where a price
change could negatively affect a firms profits. - Long hedge involves the purchase of a futures
contract to guard against a price increase. - Short hedge involves the sale of a futures
contract to protect against a price decline in
commodities or financial securities.
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33- Swaps Involve the exchange of cash payment
obligations between two parties, usually because
each party prefers the terms of the others debt
contract. Swaps can reduce each partys
financial risk.
34How can commodity futures markets be used to
reduce input price risk?
- The purchase of a commodity futures contract
will allow a firm to make a future purchase of
the input at todays price, even if the market
price on the item has risen substantially in the
interim.