chapter 11 - an introduction to derivative markets and securities
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Investment Analysis and Portfolio Mangement By Reilly and BrownChapter No. 11 An Introduction to Derivative Markets and SecuritiesTRANSCRIPT
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Lecture Presentation Software to accompany
Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management
Sixth Editionby
Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown
Chapter 11
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Chapter 11 - An Introduction to Derivative Markets and SecuritiesQuestions to be answered:• What distinguishes a derivative security such as a
forward, futures, or option contract, from more fundamental securities, such as stocks and bonds?
• What are the important characteristics of forward, futures, and option contracts, and in what sense can the be interpreted as insurance policies?
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Chapter 11 - An Introduction to Derivative Markets and Securities• How are the markets for derivative securities
organized and how do they differ from other security markets?
• What terminology is used to describe transactions that involve forward, futures, and option contracts?
• How are prices for derivative securities quoted and how should this information be interpreted?
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Chapter 11 - An Introduction to Derivative Markets and Securities• What are similarities and differences between
forward and futures contracts?
• What do the payoff diagrams look like for investments in forward and futures contracts?
• What do the payoff diagrams look like for investments in put and call option contracts?
• How are forward contracts, put options, and call options related to one another?
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Chapter 11 - An Introduction to Derivative Markets and Securities• How can derivatives be used in conjunction with
stock and Treasury bills to replicate the payoffs to other securities and create arbitrage opportunities for an investor?
• How can derivative contracts be used to restructure cash flow patterns and modify the risk in existing investment portfolios?
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Derivative Instruments• Value is depends directly on, or is derived from,
the value of another security or commodity, called the underlying asset
• Forward and Futures contracts are agreements between two parties - the buyer agrees to purchase an asset from the seller at a specific date at a price agreed to now
• Options offer the buyer the right without obligation to buy or sell at a fixed price up to or on a specific date
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Why Do Derivatives Exist?
• Assets are traded in the cash or spot market
• It is sometimes advantageous enter into a transaction now with the exchange of asset and payment at a future time
• Risk shifting
• Price formation
• Investment cost reduction
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Derivative Instruments
• Call option is the right to buy
• Forward contracts are the right and full obligation to conduct a transaction involving another security or commodity - the underlying asset - at a predetermined date (maturity date) and at a predermined price (contract price)– This is a trade agreement
• Futures contracts are similar, but subject to a daily settling-up process
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Forward Contracts
• Buyer is long, seller is short
• Contracts are OTC, have negotiable terms, and are not liquid
• Subject to credit risk or default risk
• No payments until expiration
• Agreement may be illiquid
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Futures Contracts
• Standardized terms
• Central market (futures exchange)
• More liquidity
• Less liquidity risk - initial margin
• Settlement price - daily “marking to market”
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Derivative Instruments• Options offer the buyer the right without
obligation to buy or sell at a fixed price up to or on a specific date
• Buyer has the long position in the contract
• Seller (writer) has the short position in the contract
• Buyer and seller are counterparties in the transaction
• The transaction price agreed upon is the exercise or strike price
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Options
• Option to buy is a call option
• Option to sell is a put option
• Option premium - paid for the option
• Exercise price or strike price - price agreed for purchase or sale
• Expiration date – European options
– American options
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Options
• At the money:– stock price equals exercise price
• In-the-money– option has intrinsic value
• Out-of-the-money– option has no intrinsic value
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Investing With Derivative Securities
• Call option– requires up front payment
– allows but does not require future settlement payment
• Forward contract– does not require front-end payment
– requires future settlement payment
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Options Pricing Relationships
Factor Call Option Put Option
Stock price + -
Exercise price - +
Time to expiration + +
Interest rate + -
Volatility of underlying stock price + +
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Profits to Buyer of Call Option
40 50 60 70 80 90 100
1,000
500
0
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
(500)
(1,000)
Exercise Price = $70
Option Price = $6.125
Profit from Strategy
Stock Price at Expiration
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Profits to Seller of Call Option
40 50 60 70 80 90 100
(1,000)
(1,500)
(2,000)
(500)
0
500
1,000
(2,500)
(3,000)
Exercise Price = $70
Option Price = $6.125
Stock Price at Expiration
Profit from Strategy
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Profits to Buyer of Put Option
40 50 60 70 80 90 100
1,000
500
0
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
(500)
(1,000)
Exercise Price = $70
Option Price = $2.25
Profit from Strategy
Stock Price at Expiration
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Profits to Seller of Put Option
40 50 60 70 80 90 100
(1,000)
(1,500)
(2,000)
(500)
0
500
1,000
(2,500)
(3,000)
Exercise Price = $70
Option Price = $2.25
Stock Price at Expiration
Profit from Strategy
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The Relationship Between Forward and Option Contracts
Put-call parity– Long in WYZ common at price of S0
– Long in put option to deliver WYZ at X on T• Purchase for P0
– Short in call option to purchase WYZ at X on T• Sell for C0
• Net position is guaranteed contract (risk-free)
• Since the risk-free rate equals the T-bill rate:(long stock)+(long put)+(short call)=(long T-bill)
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Creating Synthetic Securities Using Put-Call Parity
• Risk-free portfolio could be created using three risky securities:– stock, – a put option, – and a call option
• With Treasury-bill as the fourth security, any one of the four may be replaced with combinations of the other three
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Adjusting Put-Call Spot Parity For Dividends
• The owners of derivative instruments do not participate directly in payment of dividends to holders of the underlying stock
• If the dividend amounts and payment dates are known when puts and calls are written those are adjusted into the option prices
(long stock) + (long put) + (short call) = (long T-bill) + (long present value of dividends)
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Put-Call-Forward Parity
• Instead of buying stock, take a long position in a forward contract to buy stock
• Supplement this transaction by purchasing a put option and selling a call option, each with the same exercise price and expiration date
• This reduces the net initial investment compared to purchasing the stock in the spot market
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Put-Call-Forward Parity
The difference between put and call prices must equal the discounted difference between the common exercise price and the contract price of the forward agreement, otherwise arbitrage opportunities would exist
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An Introduction To The Use Of Derivatives In Portfolio Management• Restructuring asset portfolios with forward
contracts– shorting forward contracts– tactical asset allocation to time general market
movements instead of company-specific trends– hedge position with payoffs that are negatively
correlated with existing exposure– converts beta of stock to zero, making a synthetic
T-bill, affecting portfolio beta
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An Introduction To The Use Of Derivatives In Portfolio Management
• Protecting portfolio value with put coupons– purchasing protective puts– keep from committing to sell if price rises– asymmetric hedge– portfolio insurance
• Either– hold the shares and purchase a put option, or– sell the shares and buy a T-bill and a call option
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The InternetInvestments Online
www.cboe.com
www.cbot.com
www.cme.com
www.cme.com/educational/hand1.htm
www.liffe.com
www.options-iri.com
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End of Chapter 11–An Introduction to Derivative Markets and Securities
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Future topicsChapter 12
• Major Financial Statements• Analysis of Financial Ratios• Evaluating Operating Performance• Risk Analysis• Analysis of Growth Potential• Analysis of Non-U.S. Financial Statements• Quality of Financial Statements• Uses of Financial Ratios