Question: Black-Scholes Model Applied to Equities, suppose we are given the following information on an underlying stock and options: S = 60, X = 60, Rf

  1. Black-Scholes Model Applied to Equities, suppose we are given the following information on an underlying stock and options: S = 60, X = 60, Rf = 2%, T = 0.25, dividend yield = 2%, = 45%. Assume we are examining European-style options. Three Questions:

8A.) Which answer best describes how the BSM model is used to value a call option with the parameters given?

  1. The BSM model call value is the exercise price times N(d1) less the present value of the stock times N(d2).
  2. The BSM model call value is the stock price times e^-(div yield) (t) N(d1) less the exercise price times e^-(div yield) (t) N(d2)
  3. The BSM model call value is the stock price times e^-(div yield) (t) N(-d1) less the present value of the exercise price times e^-(div yield) (t) N(-d2).

8B.) Which answer best describes how the BSM model is used to value a put option with the parameters given?

  1. The BSM model put value is the exercise price times N(d1) less the present value of the stock price times N(d2).
  2. The BSM model put value is the exercise price times e^-(div yield) (t)N(-d2) less the stock price times e^-(div yield) (t)N(-d2).
  3. The BSM model put value is the exercise price times e^-(Rf) (t)N(-d2) less the stock price times e^-(div yield) (t)N(-d1).

Step by Step Solution

There are 3 Steps involved in it

1 Expert Approved Answer
Step: 1 Unlock blur-text-image
Question Has Been Solved by an Expert!

Get step-by-step solutions from verified subject matter experts

Step: 2 Unlock
Step: 3 Unlock

Students Have Also Explored These Related Finance Questions!