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Education and Consulting

Investment options

E-mail: Mort@Anvari.Net

Contracts similar to options are believed to have been used since ancient times. In the real estate market, call options have long been used to assemble large parcels of land from separate owners, e.g. a developer pays for the right to buy several adjacent plots, but is not obligated to buy these plots and might not unless he can buy all the plots in the entire parcel. Film or theatrical producers often buy the right — but not the obligation — to dramatize a specific book or script. Lines of credit give the potential borrower the right — but not the obligation — to borrow within a specified time period.

 

Many choices, or embedded options, have traditionally been included in bond contracts. For example many bonds are convertible into common stock at the buyer's option, or may be called (bought back) at specified prices at the issuer's option. Mortgage borrowers have long had the option to repay the loan early, which corresponds to a callable bond option.

The theoretical value of an option is evaluated according to several models. These models, which are developed by quantitative analysts, attempt to predict how the value of an option changes in response to changing conditions. Hence, the risks associated with granting, owning, or trading options may be quantified and managed with a greater degree of precision, perhaps, than with some other investments. Exchange-traded options form an important class of options which have standardized contract features and trade on public exchanges, facilitating trading among independent parties. Over-the-counter options are traded between private parties, often well-capitalized institutions that have negotiated separate trading and clearing arrangements with each other.

Another important class of options, particularly in the U.S., are employee stock options, which are awarded by a company to their employees as a form of incentive compensation. Other types of options exist in many financial contracts, for example real estate options are often used to assemble large parcels of land, and prepayment options are usually included in mortgage loans. However, many of the valuation and risk management principles apply across all financial options.

Every financial option is a contract between the two counterparties with the terms of the option specified in a term sheet. Option contracts may be quite complicated; however, at minimum, they usually contain the following specifications:[3]  whether the option holder has the right to buy (a call option) or the right to sell (a put option)the quantity and class of the underlying asset(s) (e.g. 100 shares of XYZ Co. B stock) the strike price, also known as the exercise price, which is the price at which the underlying transaction will occur upon exercise the expiration date, or expiry, which is the last date the option can be exercised

the settlement terms, for instance whether the writer must deliver the actual asset on exercise, or may simply tender the equivalent cash amount the terms by which the option is quoted in the market to convert the quoted price into the actual premium-–the total amount paid by the holder to the writer of the option.

 

Over-the-counter options (OTC options, also called "dealer options") are traded between two private parties, and are not listed on an exchange. The terms of an OTC option are unrestricted and may be individually tailored to meet any business need. In general, at least one of the counterparties to an OTC option is a well-capitalized institution. Option types commonly traded over the counter include:

 

1. interest rate options

2. currency cross rate options, and

3. Options on swaps or swaptions

 

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Options Futures & Derivatives

1

Introduction

2

Mechanics of Futures Markets

3

Hedging Strategies Using Futures

4

Interest Rates

5

Determination of Forward and Futures Prices

6

Interest Rate Futures

7

Swaps

8

Mechanics of Options Markets

9

Properties of Stock Options

10

Trading Strategies Involving Options

11

Binomial Trees

12

Wiener Processes and Itô’s Lemma

13

The Black-Scholes-Merton Model

14

Employee Stock Options

15

Options on Stock Indices and Currencies

16

Futures Options

17

The Greek Letters

18

Volatility Smiles

19

Basic Numerical Procedures

20

Value at Risk

21

Estimating Volatilities and Correlations

22

Credit Risk

23

Credit Derivatives

24

Exotic Options

25

Weather, Energy, & Insurance Derivatives

26

Models and Numerical Procedures

27

Martingales and Measures

28

Interest Rate Derivatives

29

Quanto, Timing, and Convexity Adjustments

30

Interest Rate Derivatives, Short Rate

31

Interest Rate Derivatives: HJM and LMM

32

Swaps Revisited

33

Real Options

34

Derivatives Mishaps

 

Behavioral Finance, Racetrack Betting