Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Options and Corporate Finance: Basic Concepts
Options and Corporate Finance: Basic Concepts
Prepared by
Gady Jacoby
University of Manitoba
and
Sebouh Aintablian
American University of
Beirut
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-1
Chapter Outline
22.1 Options
22.2 Call Options
22.3 Put Options
22.4 Selling Options
22.5 Stock Option Quotations
22.6 Combinations of Options
22.7 Valuing Options
22.8 An Option-Pricing Formula
22.9 Stocks and Bonds as Options
22.10 Capital-Structure Policy and Options
22.11 Mergers and Options
22.12 Investment in Real Projects and Options
22.13 Summary and Conclusions
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-2
22.1 Options
• Many corporate securities are similar to the stock
options that are traded on organized exchanges.
• Almost every issue of corporate stocks and bonds
has option features.
• In addition, capital structure and capital budgeting
decisions can be viewed in terms of options.
• In-the-Money
– The exercise price is less than the spot price of the
underlying asset.
• At-the-Money
– The exercise price is equal to the spot price of the
underlying asset.
• Out-of-the-Money
– The exercise price is more than the spot price of the
underlying asset.
• Intrinsic Value
– The difference between the exercise price of the option
and the spot price of the underlying asset.
• Speculative Value
– The difference between the option premium and the
intrinsic value of the option.
60
40 Buy a call
Option payoffs ($)
20
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
-40
-60
60
40
Option payoffs ($)
20
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
-60
60
40
Buy a call
Option profits ($)
20
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
-60
• Put options give the holder the right, but not the
obligation, to sell a given quantity of an asset on
or before some time in the future, at prices
agreed upon today.
• When exercising a put, you “put” the asset to
someone.
60
40 Buy a put
Option payoffs ($)
20
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Stock price ($)
-20
-40
-60
60
40
Option payoffs ($)
20
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Stock price ($)
-20
-60
40
20 Write a put
10
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
-10
Buy a put
-20 Stock price ($)
-40
-60
60
40
Buy a call
Option profitsOption
($)
20 Write a put
10
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
-10
Buy a put
-20 Stock price ($)
Write a call
-40
-60
$50
$0
Value of
$50
stock at
expiry
Covered call
$10
$0
Value of stock at expiry
$30 $40 $50
-$30 Sell a call with
-$40 exercise price of
$50 for $10
$0
-$10
Buy a put with an
-$20
$30 $40 $50 $60 $70 exercise price of
$50 for $10
Value of
stock at
A Long Straddle only makes money if the
expiry
stock price moves $20 away from $50.
Value at
expiry Buy a call with an
exercise price of
$50 for $10
Put-Call Parity
In market equilibrium, it mast be the case that option prices
are set such that: C0 Xe rT P0 S0
Otherwise, riskless portfolios with positive payoffs exist.
Buy the
Value at Buy the stock at $40 stock at $40
expiry financed with some
Buy a call option with debt: FV = $X
an exercise price of $40
P0
Sell a put with an
$0 exercise price of $40
C0
-[$40-P0] $40 $40 C0 Value of
rT
$40-P0 stock at
($40 Xe )
-$40 $40 Xe rT expiry
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-33
S0 S1
$28.75
$25
$21.25
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-38
S0 S1 C1
$28.75 $3.75
$25
$21.25 $0
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-39
S0 ( S1 - debt ) = portfolio C1
$28.75 - $21.25 = $7.50 $3.75
$25
$21.25 - $21.25 = $0 $0
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-40
$25
$21.25 - $21.25 = $0 $0
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-41
S0 ( S1 - debt ) = portfolio C1
$28.75 - $21.25 = $7.50 $3.75
$25
$21.25 - $21.25 = $0 $0
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-42
S0 ( S1 - debt ) = portfolio C1
$28.75 - $21.25 = $7.50 $3.75
$25
$21.25 - $21.25 = $0 $0
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-43
S0 C0 ( S1 - debt ) = portfolio C1
$28.75 - $21.25 = $7.50 $3.75
$25 $2.38
$21.25 - $21.25 = $0 $0
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-44
S(U), V(U)
q
S(0), V(0)
1- q
S(D), V(D)
We could value V(0) as the value of the replicating portfolio.
An equivalent method is risk-neutral valuation
q V (U ) (1 q) V ( D)
V (0)
(1 rf )
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-46
S(U), V(U)
q
q is the risk-neutral
S(0), V(0) probability of an
“up” move.
1- q
S(0) is the value of the S(D), V(D)
underlying asset today.
S(U) and S(D) are the values of the asset in
the next period following an up move and a
down move, respectively.
V(U) and V(D) are the values of the asset in the next period
following an up move and a down move, respectively.
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-47
q $28.75,C(D)
1- q
$21.25,C(D)
2/3 $28.75,C(D)
$25,C(0)
1/3
$21.25,C(D)
C (U ) $28.75 $25
1/3
$21.25, $0
2 3 $3.75 (1 3) $0
C (0)
(1.05)
C (0)
$2.50
$2.38 2/3 $28.75,$3.75
(1.05)
$25,$2.38
$25,C(0)
1/3
$21.25, $0
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-52
2 3 $3.75 (1 3) $0 $2.50
C0 $2.38
(1.05) 1.05
1 $21.25 1
C0 $25 $25 20.24 $2.38
2 (1.05) 2
Then,
d 2 d1 T 0.52815 0.30 .5 0.31602
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-56
Stockholder’s Stockholder’s
position in terms position in terms
of call options of put options
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-61
Assets BV MV Liabilities BV MV
Cash $200 $200 LT bonds $300 ?
Fixed Asset $400 $0 Equity $300 ?
Total $600 $200 Total $600 $200
The stocks are worth more with the high risk project because
the call option that the shareholders of the levered firm hold
is worth more when the volatility is increased.
McGraw-Hill Ryerson © 2003 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited
22-65
rT
C0 X e S P0