1 / 28

Single Stock Option’s Seminar

Single Stock Option’s Seminar . Part I Option Trading Overview By Steve D. Chang Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Part II Volatility Trading Concept and Application By Charles Chiang Deutsche Bank A.G. Options Trading Overview. By Steve Chang. Introduction.

solange
Download Presentation

Single Stock Option’s Seminar

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Single Stock Option’s Seminar Part I Option Trading Overview By Steve D. Chang Morgan Stanley Dean Witter Part II Volatility Trading Concept and Application By Charles Chiang Deutsche Bank A.G.

  2. Options Trading Overview By Steve Chang

  3. Introduction • Steve Chang Equity Derivatives Trader at Morgan Stanley

  4. Topics of Discussion • Basic on Options • Overview on Greeks • Volatility • Why using options? • Impact to TSE • Trading Strategies • Buy/Sell Greeks • Scenario analysis • Q & A

  5. Basics on Options • Call – give the holder the right to buy the stock by a certain date for certain price • Put – give the holder the right to sell the stock by a certain date for certain price • Premium - cost of options (call or put) • Strike price - the price at which an option contract gives the holder the right to buy/sell

  6. Basics on Options • Expiration date - final date options can be exercised • Volatility – risk factor of an option that determines the premium (40 vol = 2.5% intraday gap) • American options - options can be exercised before expiry • European options - options can only be exercised at expiry

  7. Overview on Greeks • Delta – rate of change of option’s price w/ change in underlying asset, usually short dated ATM call/put has ~0.5 delta • Gamma - rate of change of delta w/ the change in underlying asset, usually quoted in % term (+$1mn gamma, mkt +3%, +$3mn delta)

  8. Overview on Greeks • Kappa (vega) - rate of change of option’s price with change in volatility. • Theta – rate of change of option’s price with change in time, the price of gamma/kappa • Rho – rate of change of option’s price with change in interest rate

  9. Volatility • Higher the vol, higher the premium • 2mth 100% call at 40% vol ~ 6.75% (0 div, 1.82% Rfr) • 2mth 100% call at 70% vol ~ 11.65% • Market implied vol vs. asset vol • Implied usually higher than asset (Hang Seng, S&P) • Implied vol at 40% -> 2.5% gap risk

  10. Volatility – 2330

  11. Volatility – 1310

  12. Volatility – 2882

  13. Why using Options? • Leverage/ gearing effect (like warrants) • Reinforce stop-loss concept when buying • Income enhance when selling • Portfolio hedge for PMs • Short access to single stock names (+P, -C) • Long access to single stock w/o showing broker identity

  14. Impact to TSE • More participation from retails investors • Enhance market liquidity with delta hedge • Stock lending system needs to be developed • Stock lending can increase market liquidity thru long/short pair trading • Limit-up/limit-down 7% structure

  15. Trading Strategies • Buy downside put as insurance when long stocks • Sell upside call to collect premium when upside is limited • Buy call spread expecting limited upside • Buy put spread expecting limited downside • Buy strangle or straddle expecting volatility ahead • Synthetic short – buy put sell call • Most PMs buy options not sell

  16. Trading Strategies Buy call option • Expecting more upside

  17. Trading Strategies Sell put option • Expecting limited downside

  18. Trading Strategies Buy call spread • When? • Expecting more upside, reduce prem by giving up some upside • For Example: • you buy 100/120 call spread – buy 100% call, sell 120% call • Max upside = 120 – 100 – prem(%) • Max downside = premium you paid • Sell call spread – vice versa

  19. Trading Strategies Buy put spread • When? • Expecting more down, reduce premium by giving up some downside protection • For example: • Buy 100/90 put spread – buy 100% put, sell 90% put • Max upside = 100 – 90 – prem(%) • Max downside = prem you paid • Sell put spread – vice versa

  20. Trading Strategies Buy Straddle • Buy both ATM call and put • Max gain: unlimited • Max loss: time decay (theta) • Buy gamma and kappa, pay theta • Short dated straddle – buy more gamma • Long dated straddle – buy more kappa • Sell straddle – vice versa

  21. Trading Strategies Buy strangle • Buy both OTM call and put • Max gain: unlimited • Max loss: time decay, theta • You buy gamma and kappa, earn theta • Short dated strangle – buy more gamma • Long dated strangle – buy more kappa • Diversify your risk comparing to straddle and cheaper • Long straddle – vice versa

  22. Buy/sell Greeks • Buy delta • Buy spot (ie, future or stocks) • Buy call • Sell put • Sell delta – vice versa

  23. Buy/sell Greeks • Buy gamma • Buy call or put • Short dated options give you more gamma • ATM options give you more gamma • Sell gamma – vice versa

  24. Buy/sell Greeks • Buy Kappa • Buy call or put • Long dated options give you more kappa • ATM options give you more kappa • Sell kappa – vice versa

  25. Buy/sell Greeks • Long theta (receive time decay) • Sell call or put • Short dated options give you more theta (in the expense of short more gamma) • ATM options give you more theta • Sell theta – vice versa • Buy/sell Rho – N/A for Taiwan, usually hedged by eurodollar futures or swaps

  26. Scenario Analysis • If you have $1mn to buy a stock ($100). Option vs. stock strategy? (assume no funding cost) • Buy 10k at $100, +30% after 2mth, PnL = $300k • If you buy 10k of 2mth $100 strike call paying 7% or $70k (40%vol) • If stock +30% in 2mth, then you have the right to buy 10k shares at $100 which will give you the PnL of $230k ($300k – $70k) …also less funding. • Max loss using option is $70k, but loss is unlimited buying stocks • If you spend $1mn on option, PnL = $3.3mn = $1mn/7%*(30%-7%)

  27. Scenario Analysis • If you are long $2mn gamma on a stock, then stocks –28% thru 4 days of limit-down…what would be your payout? • $2mn*28 = 56mn you are short US$28mn which you may cover @28% discount. • PnL impact: 28mn/2*28%=$7.84mn

  28. Q & A

More Related