Abstract

Trading option strangles is a highly popular strategy often used by market participants to mitigate volatility risks in their portfolios. We propose a measure of the relative value of a delta-Symmetric Strangle and compute it under the standard Black-Scholes-Merton option pricing model. This new measure accounts for the price of the strangle, relative to the Present Value of the spread between the two strikes, all expressed, after a natural re-parameterization, in terms of delta and a volatility parameter. We show that under the standard BSM model, this measure of relative value is bounded by a simple function of delta only and is independent of the time to expiry, the price of the underlying security or the prevailing volatility used in the pricing model. We demonstrate how this bound can be used as a quick benchmark to assess, regardless the market volatility, the duration of the contract or the price of the underlying security, the market (relative) value of the strangle in comparison to its BSM (relative) price. In fact, the explicit and simple expression for this measure and bound allows us to also study in detail the strangle’s exit strategy and the corresponding optimal choice for a value of delta.

Highlights

  • Options, as asset’s price derivatives, are the primary tools available to the market participants for hedging their portfolio from directional risk and/or volatility risk

  • In the main result of the paper, we show that under the standard BSM option pricing model, the strangle’s relative value, R, (1), is independent of the price of the underlying security and is a function only of and the prevailing volatility used in the pricing model

  • We presented new measure of the relative value of a - Symmetric Strangle and provided for its explicit expression as calculated under the standard BSM option pricing model

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Summary

Introduction

As asset’s price derivatives, are the primary tools available to the market participants for hedging their portfolio from directional risk and/or volatility risk. That is to say that under the standard BSM option pricing model, one would expect the price of the 30 -delta Symmetric Strangle to be at most 36% of the width of the spread between the corresponding strikes, irrespective of the security’s price, or time to expiry, and irrespective of the prevailing volatility. It follows from Theorem 1, that for a any given (0,0.5) , the corresponding strangle’s price, , as calculated under the BSM pricing model, satisfies

Pricing the -Unit Option Contract
Strategizing
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