VRM15 - The Black-Scholes-Merton Model Flashcards
Explain the lognormal property of stock prices, the distribution of rates of return, and the calculation of expected return
Stock price returns tend to show lognormal distribution
Describe the assumptions underlying the Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model
- mu and sigma constant
- no transaction costs / taxes
- securities trading is continuous
- rf constant
- no dividends or americans
- no riskless arbitrage
- borrow and lend at rf
Compute the value of a EU option using the Black-Scholes-Merton model
c = S0 * exp(-qT) * N(d1) - K * exp(-rT) * N(d2)
p = K * exp(-rT) * N(-d2) - S0 * exp(-qT) * N(-d1)
d1 = (ln(s0 / K) + (r - q + sigma^2 / 2) * T) / (sigma * sqrt(T))
d2 = d1 - sigma*sqrt(T)
S0 = stock price now
q = dividend rate / foreign risk free rate (set to zero if no div or home currency)
r = risk free rate
If a discrete dividend, replace S with (S-D) where D is PV discounted continously of the dividends over T
Explain how dividends affect the decision to exercise early for American call and put options
Can sometimes be optimal to exercise right before ex-div date
Describe warrants, calculate the value of a warrant, and calculate the dilution cost of the warrant to existing shareholders
Price of warrant is calculated using BSM using share price just before announced
Warrants are options issued by a company on its own stock - if exercised dilutes company as it issues more shares
N / N+M * price of warrant is price to existing shareholders