Lecture 22: Other Derivatives - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Lecture 22: Other Derivatives

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Title: Lecture 22: Other Derivatives


1
Lecture 22 Other Derivatives
2
Option Parameters
  • Delta Partial derivative of option price with
    respect to underlying price ?C/?S
  • Gamma Second partial derivative of option price
    with respect to underlying ?2C/?S2
  • Theta Partial derivative of option price with
    respect to time ?C/?T. (Equals minus the partial
    derivative with respect to time remaining until
    exercise)
  • Vega Partial derivative of option price with
    respect to volatility ?C/?s

3
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4
Option Delta
  • Option delta is derivative of option price with
    respect to stock price
  • For calls, if stock price is way below exercise
    price, delta is nearly zero
  • For calls, if option is at the money, delta is
    roughly a half, but price of option may be way
    below half the price of the stock.
  • For calls, if stock price is way above the
    exercise price, delta is nearly one and one pays
    approximately stock price minus pdv of exercise
    price, like buying stock with credit pdv(E)

5
Call Delta ?C/?S
6
?log(C)/?log(S)
7
Call Gamma ?2C/?S2
8
Call Theta ?C/?T
9
Behavioral Aspects of Options Demand
  • Thalers mental categories theory
  • Writing an out-of-the-money call on a stock one
    holds, appears to be a win-win situation
    (Shefrin)
  • Buying an option is a way of attaining a more
    leveraged, risky position
  • Lottery principle in psychology, people
    inordinately attracted to small probabilities of
    winning big
  • Margin requirements are circumvented by options

10
Swaps and Risk Management
  • Swaps are simple exchanges between parties of one
    risk for another
  • Started in 1981, now in trillions of dollars
    worldwide

11
Precursor to SwapsParallel Loan Agreements
  • Breakdown of Bretton Woods fixed exchange rates
    in 1973 led to new ways to manage exchange rate
    risks
  • US firm with UK subsidiary lends dollars to a UK
    firm with US subsidiary. They lend pounds to US
    firm.
  • Hedges exchange rate risk
  • Long-term, to terms of parties, hence better than
    futures market hedging

12
Problems with Parallel Loan Agreements
  • Default Risk loans are independent instruments,
    so default by one party does not release other
    from obligated payments
  • Balance sheet impact parallel loans will inflate
    the balance sheet, which leads to possible
    problems with financial covenants, with public
    perception of safety of their stock

13
Efforts to Stabilize Earnings
  • Currency swings caused major changes in income
    statements of firms.
  • Zeckhauser and Patel show that firms rarely lose
    earnings, truncated distribution of earnings
    change
  • GE showed steadily growing earnings for last 20
    years

14
Swaps as Parallel Loan Agreements Stapled
Together
  • First privately arranged swaps occurred in mid
    1970s
  • First public introduction of a currency swap
    between IBM and World Bank 1981.

15
Interest Rate Swaps
  • Swap fixed for floating
  • A bank with a lot of long-term investments and
    short-term deposits may swap the short-term
    deposits for long-term

16
Swaps on Telerate ScreenTreasury-LIBOR Swap
  • 2 Yr. T70 T74
  • 3 Yr. T74 T77
  • 4 Yr. T74 T78
  • 5 Yr. T74 T79
  • 7 Yr. T73 T79
  • 10 Yr. T73 T78

17
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18
Spiders
19
MITTs Market Index Target Term Securities
  • Traded on AMEX, often issued by Merrill Lynch
  • What if I told you theres an investment that
    will give you no downside but an unlimited
    upside?
  • Example Five-year MITTs issued in 1992 for 10
    pay promise to pay the 10(1x1.15) back in five
    years, where x is percentage increase in the SP
    if positive, otherwise zero.
  • Downsides You get no dividends, your floor of
    10 is pretty low given that interest rates were
    around 5 a year in 1992

20
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21
Futures Options
22
Why Options on Futures?
  • Futures market more liquid, up-to-date, than spot
    market
  • Easier to hedge an options position in futures
    market than in spot market

23
Futures on REITs
  • August 1998 Chicago Mercantile Exchange announced
    plan for futures on the SP Real Estate Trust
    Composite Index
  • Screen-traded rather than open-outcry
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