Misplaced Pages

Chooser option

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

In finance, a chooser option is a special type of option contract. It gives the purchaser a fixed period to decide whether the derivative will be a European call or put option.

In more detail, a chooser option has a specified decision time t 1 {\displaystyle t_{1}} , where the buyer has to make the decision described above. Finally, at the expiration time t 2 {\displaystyle t_{2}} the option expires. If the buyer has chosen that it should be a call option, the payout is max ( S K , 0 ) {\displaystyle \max(S-K,0)} . For the choice of a put option, the payout is max ( K S , 0 ) {\displaystyle \max(K-S,0)} . Here K {\displaystyle K} is the strike price of the option and S {\displaystyle S} is the stock price at expiry.

Replication

For stocks without dividend, the chooser option can be replicated using one call option with strike price K {\displaystyle K} and expiration time t 2 {\displaystyle t_{2}} , and one put option with strike price K e r ( t 2 t 1 ) {\displaystyle Ke^{-r(t_{2}-t_{1})}} and expiration time t 1 {\displaystyle t_{1}} ;.

References

  1. Yue-Kuen Kwok, Compound options

Bibliography

  • Yue-Kuen Kwok, Compound options (from Derivatives Week and Encyclopedia of Financial Engineering and Risk Management)
Derivatives market
Derivative (finance)
Options
Terms
Vanillas
Exotics
Strategies
Valuation
Swaps
Exotic derivatives
Other derivatives
Market issues
Category:
Chooser option Add topic