8、Al Bingly, CFA, is a derivatives specialist who attempts to identify and make short-term gains from trading mispriced options. One of the strategies that Bingly uses is to look for arbitrage opportunities in the market for European options. This strategy involves creating a synthetic call from other instruments at a cost less than the market value of the call itself, and then selling the call. During the course of his research, he observes that Hilland Corporation’s stock is currently priced at $56, while a European-style put option with a strike price of $55 is trading at $0.40 and a European-style call option with the same strike price is trading at $2.50. Both options have 6 months remaining until expiration. The risk-free rate is currently 4 percent.
Bingly often uses the binomial model to estimate the fair price of an option. He then compares his estimated price to the market price. He observes that Dale Corporation’s stock has a current market price of $200, and he predicts that its price will either be $166.67 or $240 in one year. The risk-free rate is currently 4 percent. He also observes that the price of a one-year call with a $220 strike price is $11.11.
Bingly also uses the Black-Scholes-Merton model to price options. His stated rationale for using this model is that he believes the prices of the stocks he analyzes follow a lognormal distribution, and because the model allows for a varying risk-free rate over the life of the option. His plan is to use a statistical technique to estimate the volatility of a stock, enter it into the Black-Scholes-Merton model, and see if the associated price is higher or lower than the observed market price of the options on the stock.
Bingly wishes to apply the Black-Scholes-Merton model to both non-dividend paying and dividend paying stocks. He investigates how the presence of dividends will affect the estimated call and put price.
In the case of the options on Hilland Corporation’s stock, if Bingly were to establish a long protective put position, he could:
A) earn an arbitrage profit of $0.30 per share by selling the call and lending $57.20 at the risk-free rate. B) earn an arbitrage profit of $0.03 per share by selling the call and borrowing the remaining funds needed for the position at the risk-free rate. C) not earn an arbitrage profit because he should short the protective put position. D) not earn an arbitrage profit because the position is in equilibrium. |