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NAG Toolbox: nag_specfun_opt_bsm_price (s30aa)
Purpose
nag_specfun_opt_bsm_price (s30aa) computes the European option price given by the Black–Scholes–Merton formula.
Syntax
[
p,
ifail] = s30aa(
calput,
x,
s,
t,
sigma,
r,
q, 'm',
m, 'n',
n)
[
p,
ifail] = nag_specfun_opt_bsm_price(
calput,
x,
s,
t,
sigma,
r,
q, 'm',
m, 'n',
n)
Description
nag_specfun_opt_bsm_price (s30aa) computes the price of a European call (or put) option for constant volatility,
, and risk-free interest rate,
, with a possible dividend yield,
, using the Black–Scholes–Merton formula (see
Black and Scholes (1973) and
Merton (1973)). For a given strike price,
, the price of a European call with underlying price,
, and time to expiry,
, is
and the corresponding European put price is
and where
denotes the cumulative Normal distribution function,
and
The option price is computed for each strike price in a set , , and for each expiry time in a set , .
References
Black F and Scholes M (1973) The pricing of options and corporate liabilities Journal of Political Economy 81 637–654
Merton R C (1973) Theory of rational option pricing Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science 4 141–183
Parameters
Compulsory Input Parameters
- 1:
– string (length ≥ 1)
-
Determines whether the option is a call or a put.
- A call; the holder has a right to buy.
- A put; the holder has a right to sell.
Constraint:
or .
- 2:
– double array
-
must contain
, the th strike price, for .
Constraint:
, where , the safe range parameter, for .
- 3:
– double scalar
-
, the price of the underlying asset.
Constraint:
, where , the safe range parameter.
- 4:
– double array
-
must contain
, the th time, in years, to expiry, for .
Constraint:
, where , the safe range parameter, for .
- 5:
– double scalar
-
, the volatility of the underlying asset. Note that a rate of 15% should be entered as 0.15.
Constraint:
.
- 6:
– double scalar
-
, the annual risk-free interest rate, continuously compounded. Note that a rate of 5% should be entered as 0.05.
Constraint:
.
- 7:
– double scalar
-
, the annual continuous yield rate. Note that a rate of 8% should be entered as 0.08.
Constraint:
.
Optional Input Parameters
- 1:
– int64int32nag_int scalar
-
Default:
the dimension of the array
x.
The number of strike prices to be used.
Constraint:
.
- 2:
– int64int32nag_int scalar
-
Default:
the dimension of the array
t.
The number of times to expiry to be used.
Constraint:
.
Output Parameters
- 1:
– double array
-
.
contains , the option price evaluated for the strike price at expiry for and .
- 2:
– int64int32nag_int scalar
unless the function detects an error (see
Error Indicators and Warnings).
Error Indicators and Warnings
Errors or warnings detected by the function:
-
-
On entry, was an illegal value.
-
-
Constraint: .
-
-
Constraint: .
-
-
Constraint: and .
-
-
Constraint: and .
-
-
Constraint: .
-
-
Constraint: .
-
-
Constraint: .
-
-
Constraint: .
-
-
Constraint: .
-
An unexpected error has been triggered by this routine. Please
contact
NAG.
-
Your licence key may have expired or may not have been installed correctly.
-
Dynamic memory allocation failed.
Accuracy
The accuracy of the output is dependent on the accuracy of the cumulative Normal distribution function,
. This is evaluated using a rational Chebyshev expansion, chosen so that the maximum relative error in the expansion is of the order of the
machine precision (see
nag_specfun_cdf_normal (s15ab) and
nag_specfun_erfc_real (s15ad)). An accuracy close to
machine precision can generally be expected.
Further Comments
None.
Example
This example computes the prices for six European call options using two expiry times and three strike prices as input. The times to expiry are taken as and years respectively. The stock price is , with strike prices, , and . The risk-free interest rate is per year and the volatility is per year.
Open in the MATLAB editor:
s30aa_example
function s30aa_example
fprintf('s30aa example results\n\n');
put = 'c';
s = 55;
sigma = 0.3;
r = 0.1;
q = 0;
x = [58, 60, 62];
t = [0.7, 0.8];
[p, ifail] = s30aa( ...
put, x, s, t, sigma, r, q);
fprintf('\nBlack-Scholes-Merton formula\n European Call :\n');
fprintf(' Spot = %9.4f\n', s);
fprintf(' Volatility = %9.4f\n', sigma);
fprintf(' Rate = %9.4f\n', r);
fprintf(' Dividend = %9.4f\n\n', q);
fprintf(' Strike Expiry Option Price\n');
for i=1:3
for j=1:2
fprintf('%9.4f %9.4f %9.4f\n', x(i), t(j), p(i,j));
end
end
s30aa example results
Black-Scholes-Merton formula
European Call :
Spot = 55.0000
Volatility = 0.3000
Rate = 0.1000
Dividend = 0.0000
Strike Expiry Option Price
58.0000 0.7000 5.9198
58.0000 0.8000 6.5506
60.0000 0.7000 5.0809
60.0000 0.8000 5.6992
62.0000 0.7000 4.3389
62.0000 0.8000 4.9379
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© The Numerical Algorithms Group Ltd, Oxford, UK. 2009–2015