Essentials Of Investments
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781260013924
Author: Bodie, Zvi, Kane, Alex, MARCUS, Alan J.
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education,
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Textbook Question
Chapter 15, Problem 25PS
You buy a share of stock, mite a one-year call option with
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
You buy a share of stock, write a 1-year call option with X = $55, and buy a 1-year put option with X = $55. Your net outlay to establish
the entire portfolio is $54. The stock pays no dividends.
a. What is the payoff of your portfolio?
Payoff
b. What must be the risk-free interest rate? (Round your answer to 2 decimal places.)
Risk-free rate
%
You buy a share of stock, write a 1-year call option with X = $80, and buy a 1-year put option with X = $80. Your net outlay to establish the entire portfolio is $78.4. The stock pays no dividends.
1.What is the payoff of your portfolio?
2.What must be the risk-free interest rate?
You buy a share of stock, write a 1-year call option with X = $85, and buy a 1-year put option with X = $85. Your net outlay to establish the entire portfolio is $83.3. Required: What is the payoff of your portfolio? What must be the risk-free interest rate? The stock pays no dividends. Note: Round your answer to 2 decimal places.
Chapter 15 Solutions
Essentials Of Investments
Ch. 15.2 - Plot the rate of return to the call-plus-bills...Ch. 15.2 - Prob. 2EQCh. 15 - Prob. 1PSCh. 15 - Prob. 2PSCh. 15 - Prob. 3PSCh. 15 - Prob. 4PSCh. 15 - Prob. 5PSCh. 15 - Prob. 6PSCh. 15 - Prob. 7PSCh. 15 - The following diagram shows the value of a put...
Ch. 15 - You are a portfolio manager who uses Options...Ch. 15 - An investor purchases a stock for 38 and a put for...Ch. 15 - ll. Imagine that you are holding shares of stock,...Ch. 15 - Prob. 12PSCh. 15 - The common stock of the R.U.I.T. Corporation has...Ch. 15 - 14. The common stock of the C.A.L.L. Corporation...Ch. 15 - Prob. 15PSCh. 15 - Prob. 16PSCh. 15 - Prob. 17PSCh. 15 - Prob. 18PSCh. 15 - Prob. 19PSCh. 15 - In what ways is owning a corporate bond similar to...Ch. 15 - Prob. 21PSCh. 15 - Consider the following options portfolio: You...Ch. 15 - Consider the following portfolio. You write a put...Ch. 15 - A put option with strike price 300 on the Acme...Ch. 15 - You buy a share of stock, mite a one-year call...Ch. 15 - Joe Finance has just purchased a stock-index fund,...Ch. 15 - You write a call option with X=50 and buy a call...Ch. 15 - Devise a portfolio using only call options and...Ch. 15 - Prob. 29CCh. 15 - Prob. 1CPCh. 15 - Prob. 2CPCh. 15 - Prob. 3CPCh. 15 - Prob. 4CPCh. 15 - Prob. 5CPCh. 15 - Prob. 1WM
Knowledge Booster
Learn more about
Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, finance and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- You buy a share of stock, write a one-year call option with X = $26, and buy a one-year put option with X = $26. Your net outlay to establish the entire portfolio is $24.60. What is the payoff of your portfolio? What must be the risk-free interest rate? The stock pays no dividends. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Round "risk-free rate" to 2 decimal places.)arrow_forwardD3) Finance What is the probability that the put option is OTM at maturity if: the Stock is S = $195.00, no dividend is paid, the risk-free rate is r = 2.40%, the strike price is K = 209.00, the maturity is T = 23 months and the parameters are d1 = 0.2328 and d2 = -0.3175?arrow_forward4. (15 pts) The current price of a stock is $50 and we assume it can be modeled by geometric Brownian motion with o = .15. If the interest rate is 5% and we want to sell an option to buy the stock for $55 in 2 years, what should be the initial price of the option for there not to be an arbitrage opportunity?arrow_forward
- HELP WITH 2 PLEASE!!!! Consider a two period economy. You can buy stocks in period 0, and then sell them in period 1. You can also enter into futures contracts in period 0, which expire in period 1. Suppose a stock has a β of 0.5. The stock pays no dividends, and is trading at $100. The market has an expected return of 10%. The interest rate is 2%. Suppose the CAPM holds. What is the stock’s expected return? What is the expected price of the stock in period 1? Consider a futures contract on the stock, expiring at t = 1. What is the fair price of the futures contract, in t = 1 dollars? Suppose you take a long position in the futures contract in period 0 (so, you promise to pay money, in exchange for getting the stock in period 1). When the futures contract expires in period 1, you receive the stock and immediately sell it. What is the expected amount you will pay in money for the stock? What is the expected amount you get from selling the stock? Since buying single-stock futures…arrow_forwardImagine all investors are risk-neutral and we have the following binomial tree: 0 Stock: So= 80 1 100 72 2 120 90 86.4 64.8 Using the risk-neutral option valuation approach, calculate the price of a two-year put option on this stock with a strike price $92. Assume that the risk-free rate is 3% per year. Also assume the stock does not pay a dividend. Pick the closest number.arrow_forwardProblem 1 Suggest two different portfolios that produce the payoff diagram as in the graph below. Both portfolios may contain any amount of risk-free borrowing or lending, and the underlying stock. Portfolio 1 may contain call options but no put options. Portfolio 2 may contain put options but no call options. Assume the risk-free rate is rf = 10%. 25 20 15 10 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 -5 -10 -15 Problem 2 Suppose that a stock is currently trading at $60 per share, and the stock price can only take two possible values one year from now: it can either go up by 25% or down by 20%. The annual risk-free rate is 4%. Assume that the stock pays no dividends. You are interested in pricing an European put option on this stock. The option has a strike price of $66, and its maturity date is exactly one year from now. a) What is the payoff on the put option if the stock price goes up by 25%? b) What is the payoff on the put option if the stock price goes down by 20%? c) What is the price of the put…arrow_forward
- H5. What is the payoff to the trading strategy if the stock price at expiration is equal to $0 (i.e., the stock price is zero)? What is the payoff to the trading strategy if the stock price at expiration is equal to $50? What portfolio of calls (maturity T, any strike) and/or bonds (Zero Coupon Bond paying $1 at time T) will give you the desired payoff? Group of answer choices Sell $30 zero-coupon bonds, buy a call option with a strike price of $20, sell two call options with a strike of $40, and sell a call option with a strike price of $80 Buy $30 zero-coupon bonds, sell two call option with a strike price of $30, buy 2 call options with a strike of $40, and sell a call with a strike price of $80 It is not possible to construct this payoff with only calls and bonds Sell $50 zero-coupon bonds, buy two call with the strike price of $80, buy two calls with a strike price of $40, and sell a call with a strike of $20 Buy $30 zero-coupon bonds, sell a call option with a strike…arrow_forwardA call option has X=$52 and expire in 360 days (suppose we have 360 days in one year). The risk-free rate is 4%. The call is priced at $11. A put option has X-$52 and is priced at $1. The underlying asset is priced at S0=$43. Suppose in our investments, we could involve one call, one put, one bond, and on stock. How much arbitrage profit could we possibly obtain?arrow_forwardSuppose that a call option to buy a share for $200 costs $10. What is the delta of this option today if the current stock price is $180? (ignore time value of the option) A. around 2 B. None of these answers are correct. C. around 0.5 D. close to 0 E. close to 1arrow_forward
- Consider a put option on a stock that currently sells for £100, but may rise to £120 or fall to £80 after 1 year. The risk free rate of return is 10%, and the exercise price is £90. (b) Calculate the value of the put option by using first principles (No Arbitrage prin- ciples). Explain the reasoning behind your calculations.arrow_forwardCompute the Black-Scholes price of a call option on a stock which does not pay dividends and has the volatility 0.2, if its exercise price is 200 USD and expiration in one year. Interest rate is zero and the price of the stock is 180 USD. Use excel.arrow_forward5. Suppose the one-year futures price on a stock-index portfolio is 1218, the stock index currently is 1200, the one-year risk-free interest rate is 3%, and the ybar-end dividend that will be paid on a $1,200 investment in the index portfolio is $15. a. By how much is the contract mispriced? b. Formulate a zero-net-investment arbitrage portfolio and show that you can lock in riskless profits equal to the futures mispricing. Assume a zero bid-ask spread in security and futures transactions. Now assume that if you short sell the stocks in the index portfolio, the proceeds are kept with the broker, and you do not receive any interest income of the funds. Is there still an arbitrage opportunity (assuming that you don't already own the shares in the index)? d. Given the short sale rules, what is the no-arbitrage band for the stock-futures price relationship? Specifically, how high and how low can the futures price be without giving rise to arbitrage opportunities. C.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Essentials Of InvestmentsFinanceISBN:9781260013924Author:Bodie, Zvi, Kane, Alex, MARCUS, Alan J.Publisher:Mcgraw-hill Education,
- Foundations Of FinanceFinanceISBN:9780134897264Author:KEOWN, Arthur J., Martin, John D., PETTY, J. WilliamPublisher:Pearson,Fundamentals of Financial Management (MindTap Cou...FinanceISBN:9781337395250Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Joel F. HoustonPublisher:Cengage LearningCorporate Finance (The Mcgraw-hill/Irwin Series i...FinanceISBN:9780077861759Author:Stephen A. Ross Franco Modigliani Professor of Financial Economics Professor, Randolph W Westerfield Robert R. Dockson Deans Chair in Bus. Admin., Jeffrey Jaffe, Bradford D Jordan ProfessorPublisher:McGraw-Hill Education
Essentials Of Investments
Finance
ISBN:9781260013924
Author:Bodie, Zvi, Kane, Alex, MARCUS, Alan J.
Publisher:Mcgraw-hill Education,
Foundations Of Finance
Finance
ISBN:9780134897264
Author:KEOWN, Arthur J., Martin, John D., PETTY, J. William
Publisher:Pearson,
Fundamentals of Financial Management (MindTap Cou...
Finance
ISBN:9781337395250
Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Joel F. Houston
Publisher:Cengage Learning
Corporate Finance (The Mcgraw-hill/Irwin Series i...
Finance
ISBN:9780077861759
Author:Stephen A. Ross Franco Modigliani Professor of Financial Economics Professor, Randolph W Westerfield Robert R. Dockson Deans Chair in Bus. Admin., Jeffrey Jaffe, Bradford D Jordan Professor
Publisher:McGraw-Hill Education
Accounting for Derivatives Comprehensive Guide; Author: WallStreetMojo;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9D-0LoM4dy4;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY
Option Trading Basics-Simplest Explanation; Author: Sky View Trading;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=joJ8mbwuYW8;License: Standard YouTube License, CC-BY