Title: Black-Scholes Pricing
1 Black-Scholes Pricing Related Models
2Option Valuation
- Black and Scholes
- Call Pricing
- Put-Call Parity
- Variations
3Option Pricing Calls
C Call S Stock Price N Cumulative Normal
Distrib. Operator X Exercise Price e
2.71..... r risk-free rate T time to expiry
Volatility
4Call Option Pricing Example
- IBM is trading for 75. Historically, the
volatility is 20 (s). A call is available with
an exercise of 70, an expiry of 6 months, and
the risk free rate is 4.
ln(75/70) (.04 (.2)2/2)(6/12) d1
--------------------------------------------
.70, N(d1) .7580 .2 (6/12)1/2 d2 .70 -
.2 (6/12)1/2 .56, N(d2) .7123 C 75
(.7580) - 70 e -.04(6/12) (.7123)
7.98 Intrinsic Value 5, Time Value 2.98
5Put Option Pricing
- Put priced through Put-Call Parity
Put Price Call Price X e-rT - S
(or
)
From Last Example of IBM Call Put 7.98
70 e -.04(6/12) - 75 1.59 Intrinsic Value
0, Time Value 1.59
6Black-Scholes Variants
- Options on Stocks with Dividends
- Futures Options (Option that delivers
a maturing futures) - Blacks Call Model (Black (1976))
- Put/Call Parity
- Options on Foreign Currency
- In text (Pg. 375-376, but not reqd)
- Delivers spot exchange, not forward!
7The Stock Pays no Dividends During the Options
Life
- If you apply the BSOPM to two securities, one
with no dividends and the other with a dividend
yield, the model will predict the same call
premium - Robert Merton developed a simple extension to the
BSOPM to account for the payment of dividends
8The Stock Pays Dividends During the Options Life
(contd)
Adjust the BSOPM by following (?continuous
dividend yield)
9Futures Option Pricing Model
- Blacks futures option pricing model for European
call options
10Futures Option Pricing Model (contd)
- Blacks futures option pricing model for European
put options - Alternatively, value the put option using
put/call parity
11Assumptions of the Black-Scholes Model
- European exercise style
- Markets are efficient
- No transaction costs
- The stock pays no dividends during the options
life (Merton model) - Interest rates and volatility remain constant,
but are unknown
12Interest Rates Remain Constant
- There is no real riskfree interest rate
- Often use the closest T-bill rate to expiry
13Calculating Volatility Estimates
- from Historical Data S, R, T that just was,
and ? as standard deviation of historical returns
from some arbitrary past period - from Actual Data S, R, T that just
was, and ? implied from pricing of nearest
at-the-money option (termed implied
volatility).
14Intro to Implied Volatility
- Instead of solving for the call premium, assume
the market-determined call premium is correct - Then solve for the volatility that makes the
equation hold - This value is called the implied volatility
15Calculating Implied Volatility
- Setup spreadsheet for pricing at-the-money call
option. - Input actual price.
- Run SOLVER to equate actual and calculated price
by varying ?.
16Volatility Smiles
- Volatility smiles are in contradiction to the
BSOPM, which assumes constant volatility across
all strike prices - When you plot implied volatility against striking
prices, the resulting graph often looks like a
smile
17Volatility Smiles (contd)
18Problems Using the Black-Scholes Model
- Does not work well with options that are
deep-in-the-money or substantially
out-of-the-money - Produces biased values for very low or very high
volatility stocks - Increases as the time until expiration increases
- May yield unreasonable values when an option has
only a few days of life remaining