Chapter 13
Chapter 13
Chapter 13
Options on Futures
In this chapter, we discuss option on futures contracts. This
chapter is organized into:
1. Characteristics of Options on Physicals and Options
on Futures.
2. The Market for Options on Futures
3. Pricing of Options on Futures
4. Price Relationship Between Options on Physicals and
Options on Futures
5. Put-Call Parity for Options on Futures
6. Options on Futures and Synthetic Futures
7. Risk Management with Options on Futures
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= $.48
= $.44/euro
= March
= 125,000 euros
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The put owner would not exercise unless the exercise price
exceeded the futures settlement price.
Upon exercise, the put seller:
Receives a long position in the underlying futures
contract.
Pays the exercise price minus the settlement price.
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= $2.40/bushel
= 5,000 bushels
= $2.32/bushel.
= May
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C=e
- rt
[ F 0,t N( d *1 ) - E N( d *2 )]
Where
r = risk-free rate of interest
t = time until expiration for the forward and the option
F0,t = forward price for a contract expiring at time t
= standard deviation of the forward contracts price
*
1
ln( F / E ) .5 2 t
d * 2 d *1 t
If there were no uncertainty, N(d1*) and N(d2*) will equal
1 and the equation would simplify to:
Cf = e-rt[F0,t - E]
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American Options
Early exercise of a dividend paying futures option has
benefits and costs
Benefit: exercise provides an immediate payment of F E
which can earn interest until expiration ert [F - E].
Cost: sacrifice of option value over and above intrinsic
value F E.
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2.
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These cash flows affect both the option on the physical and
the option on the futures.
The analysis focuses on underlying physical asset paying a
continuous dividend (cash flow) equal to the risk-free rate
of interest.
Under conditions of certainty, a futures call option is worth
the present value of:
F0,t E, t = 0
Based on the perfect markets Cost-of-Carry Model the
futures price will be:
F0,t = S0(1 + C)
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where:
Cf = the price of a call option on the futures
After adjusting the Black-Scholes model for continuous
paying dividend:
C f = e-rt S 0 N( d *1 ) - e - rt EN( d *2 )
C f = e-rt S 0 N( d 1 ) - EN( d 2 )
The values for the call option on the futures and physical are
the same. That is, d1* = d1, and d2* = d2.
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C - P = S0 - Ee-rt
where:
C
P
E
S0
r
t
=
=
=
=
=
=
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Cf - Pf = (F0,t - E)e-rt
where:
Cf
Pf
F0,t
= risk-free rate
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F0,t = S0ert
Substituting this expression for the futures price into the
above equation gives:
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Portfolio B:
(half insured)
Portfolio C:
(fully insured)
Portfolio B:
Portfolio C:
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Portfolio Insurance
Recall that in portfolio insurance, a trader transacts to
insure that the value of a portfolio does not fall below a
given amount.
Based on figure 13.4, portfolio C is an insured portfolio:
The value of portfolio C cannot fall below $100. To create
portfolio C, a trader bought the index at $100 and bought an
index put with an exercise price of $100.
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