Range Options

Range Options (Boundary Options)

Many new exotic currency options have sprung up during the last five years primarily to create payoff and risk profiles that are attractive for specific user constituencies. A simultaneous endeavor has been the search for options premiums that are lower than those incurred with traditional put and call options. Among the variety of exotic options that have accomplished these objectives and which have become popular are barrier options and digital options.

A recent newcomer that combines the characteristics of barrier and digital options but that produces its own unique payoff and risk profile is the Binary Range Option.

A Range Option is neither a call nor a put option but rather an option that gives the holder a specific amount (payoff) if the underlying currency remains within a predetermined price range (Boundary) by the expiration of the option. Typically, the Boundary levels are set above (Upper Boundary) and below (Lower Boundary) the currency’s spot price. However, if the Boundary levels are touched at any time prior to expiration, the option ceases to exist.

Binary Range Options are attractive holdings for investors who believe that a currency will remain within a given trading price and are willing to risk a known and predefined premium for a specific maximum return. Thus, both the maximum potential gain (payoff) and premium (risk) are known in advanced.

Another important attribute of Binary Range Options is that they are one of the few structured options that allow the holder to benefit from a decline in the volatility of the underlying currency without the necessity for writing options. Moreover, they are simple in construction as well as easy to understand, monitor and calculate the payoff return. In addition, customization of the Boundary levels provides for the ability to engineer an option premium that is affordable for a client.

There are a number of important benefits for using Binary Range Options.

The first is the ability of a buyer of Binary Range Options to profit from a reduction in volatility. With traditional put and call options it is only the seller of an option who can benefit in the event volatility contracts. Dealers usually restrict the selling of options to suitable and qualified clients and frequently request sizable capital requirements as well as high credit worthiness. Binary Range Options offer the buyer similar benefits that sellers of traditional options may avail themselves of without the necessary higher suitability or credit requirements.

The premium paid for a Binary Range Option is dependent upon seven primary elements:

1. Spot Price of the currency
2. Domestic interest rate
3. Foreign interest rate
4. Time to maturity
5. Volatility of the currency
6. Up and Down Boundaries
7. Trade Amount

For Example:

USD/DEM Spot = 1.50
DEM Libor = 3.4%
USD Libor = 5.9%
Time to Expiration: = 92 Days
Volatility = 12.5%
Boundaries = 1.40 and 1.60
Amount = 1,000,000 DEM

Binary Range Option Premium = 422,863 DEM

Payoff results for Binary Range Options are most similar to the combination of buying a spread and selling another spread. However, there are important attributes to Binary Range Options. The first is that there is only one transaction to monitor instead of a series of different options. The second is the fact that as time passes the option increases in value. The graph illustrates the value of the Binary Range Option in seven different time intervals that end at the expiration date. The shorter the time to expiration and the further the distance from the boundaries, the higher the value of the option.

financial spread betting

Financial Spread Betting

Understanding Spread bets and longer term positions when playing Spread Betting Financial Games

Financial spread betting is a tax-free, economical form of financial games betting. The spread is the difference between the bid/sell and the offer/buy price offered by the provider of spread betting services.

About long term position

You predict that the price of a particular financial instrument is going to rise in the future. You place a buy bet, hence go long or take a long position. You hold on to the position for a long period of time. You stake per penny/point rise/fall in the price.

Why go for the long position in Spread Betting Financial Games?

§ Short-term trading in spread betting can be an expensive proposition

§ There is no need to follow and observe the market always

§ It is easier to grasp long term trends than trap short-term movements

§ The rollover costs are spread out over a long period of time and are not much in number

What financial instruments in spread betting financial games facilitate long positions?

Financial spread bets can be placed on different types of financial instruments like stock indices, markets, shares and commodities. Playing spread betting financial games on gold is done in the long term.

Disadvantages of using in financial games like spread bets to hold out longer term positions

Every spread bet has an expiry date. When you are holding longer term positions in the same there is a need to extend the spread bet beyond the expiry date. To do this, you have to incur the rollover cost – the cost of spread that needs to be paid again and every-time you choose to extend the bet.

Glossary

Financial Gaming Glossary

In this glossary you will find an explanation of the most common terms used in the Financial Gaming industry.

Fixed Odds

Explanation of Fixed odds for those wanting to learn to be posted here.

Exotic Option

A Exotic option is a derivative which has features making it more complex than commonly traded products Continue reading 'Exotic Option'

One Touch Option

One Touch is a type of exotic option that gives an investor a payout once the price of the underlying asset reaches or surpasses a predetermined barrier. This type of option allows the investor to set the position of the barrier, the time to expiration and the payout to be received once the barrier is broken. Only two outcomes are possible with this type of option: 1) the barrier is breached and the trader collects the full payout agreed upon at the outset of the contract, or 2) the barrier is not breached and the trader loses the full premium paid to the broker.

This type of option is useful for traders who believe that the price of an underlying asset will exceed a certain level in the future, but who are not sure that the higher price level is sustainable. Because a one-touch option only has one barrier level, it is generally slightly less expensive than a double one-touch option. These types of options are becoming more popular with traders in the commodity and forex markets.

Asian option

Asian option (or average value option) is a special type of option contract. For Asian options the payoff is determined by the average underlying price over some pre-set period of time. This is different to the case of the usual European option, where the payoff of the option contract depends on the price of the underlying instrument at maturity.

One advantage of Asian options is that these reduce the risk of market manipulation of the underlying instrument at maturity.

Barrier option

Barrier option is a type of financial option where the option to exercise depends on the underlying crossing or reaching a given barrier level. Barrier options are always cheaper than a similar option without barrier. Barrier options were created to provide the insurance value of an option without charging as much premium.[citation needed] For example, if you believe that IBM will go up this year, but are willing to bet that it won't go above $100, then you can buy the barrier and pay less premium than the vanilla option.

Barrier options are path-dependent exotics that are similar in some ways to ordinary options. There are put and call, as well as European and American varieties. But they become activated or, on the contrary, null and void only if the underlier reaches a predetermined level (barrier).

"In" options start their lives worthless and only become active in the event a predetermined knock-in barrier price is breached. "Out" options start their lives active and become null and void in the event a certain knock-out barrier price is breached.

In either case, if the option expires inactive, then there may be a cash rebate paid out. This could be nothing, in which case the option ends up worthless, or it could be some fraction of the premium.

The four main types of barrier options are:

Up-and-out: spot price starts below the barrier level and has to move up for the option to be knocked out.

Down-and-out: spot price starts above the barrier level and has to move down for the option to become null and void.

Up-and-in: spot price starts below the barrier level and has to move up for the option to become activated.

Down-and-in: spot price starts above the barrier level and has to move down for the option to become activated.

For example, a European call option may be written on an underlying with spot price of $100, and a knockout barrier of $120. This option behaves in every way like a vanilla European call, except if the spot price ever moves above $120, the option "knocks out" and the contract is null and void. Note that the option does not reactivate if the spot price falls below $120 again. Once it is out, it's out for good.

In-out parity is the barrier option's answer to put-call parity. If we combine one "in" option and one "out" barrier option with the same strikes and expirations, we get the price of a vanilla option: C = Cin + Cout. A simple arbitrage argument—simultaneously holding the "in" and the "out" option guarantees that one and only one of the two will pay off. The argument only works for European options without rebate.

Binary option

Binary option is a type of option where the payoff is either some fixed amount of some asset or nothing at all. The two main types of binary options are the cash-or-nothing binary option and the asset-or-nothing binary option. The cash-or-nothing binary option pays some fixed amount of cash if the option expires in-the-money while the asset-or-nothing pays the value of the underlying security. Thus, the options are binary in nature because there are only two possible outcomes. They are also called all-or-nothing options, digital options (more common in forex/interest rate markets), and Fixed Return Options (FROs) (on the American Stock Exchange).

For example, a purchase is made of a binary cash-or-nothing call option on XYZ Corp's stock struck at $100 with a binary payoff of $1000. Then, if at the future maturity date, the stock is trading at or above $100, $1000 is received. If its stock is trading below $100, nothing is received.

In the popular Black-Scholes model, the value of a digital option can be expressed in terms of the cumulative normal distribution function.