SIQ3004 Mathematics of Financial Derivatives: Chapter 7: The Black-Scholes Formula
SIQ3004 Mathematics of Financial Derivatives: Chapter 7: The Black-Scholes Formula
SIQ3004 Mathematics of Financial Derivatives: Chapter 7: The Black-Scholes Formula
where
S
+ r − δ + 21 σ 2 T √
ln K
d1 = √ and d2 = d1 − σ T .
σ T
−δT
ln Ke −rT + 21 σ 2 T
Se S
+ r − δ − 21 σ 2 T
ln K
= √ , and d2 = √
σ T σ T
P (x , K , σ, r , T , rf ) = C (x , K , σ, r , T , rf ) + Ke −rT − xe −rf T
I Example 12.4
I x0 = 1.25/€ , K = $1.20, σ = 0.10, r = 1%, T = 1, and rf = 3%
I The price of a dollar-denominated euro call is $0.061407.
I The price of a dollar-denominated euro put is $0.03641.
KYB (SIQ3004, Sem II, 2019/2020) The Black-Scholes Formula 10 / 38
Options on Futures
I Example 12.5:
I Suppose 1-yr. futures price for natural gas is $6.50/MMBtu,r = 2%
I Therefore, F = $6.50, K = $6.50, and r = 2%
I If σ = 0.25, T = 1, call price = put price = $0.63379
Theta for calls (top panel) and puts (bottom panel) with different expirations at
different stock prices. Assumes K = $40, σ = 30%, r = 8%, and δ = 0.
The same relation holds true for the other Greeks as well.
$41 × 0.6911
Ω= = 4.071
$6.961
I The put has a price of $2.886 and ∆ = −0.3089;
I Hence, the elasticity is
$41 × (−0.3089)
Ω= = −4.389
$2.886
I The Sharpe ratio for any asset is the ratio of the risk premium to
volatility:
risk premium α−r
Sharpe ratio = =
volatility σ
I The Sharpe ratio for a call
γ−r Ω (α − r ) α−r
Sharpe ratio for call = = = .
σoption Ωσ σ
Thus, the Sharpe ratio for a call equals the Sharpe ratio for the
underlying stock.
I Note that the option is always equivalent to a levered position in the
stock, and that leverage per se does not change the Sharpe ratio.
I Volatility is unobservable
I Option prices, particularly for near-the-money options, can be quite
sensitive to volatility
I One approach is to compute historical volatility using the history of
returns
I A problem with historical volatility is that expected future volatility can
be different from historical volatility.
I Alternatively, we can calculate implied volatility, which is the volatility
that, when put into a pricing formula (typically Black-Scholes), yields
the observed option price.