Dr. Jayanthi Sankaran
Well-Known Member
Hi David,
As referenced above:
Given the following data: Stock price = $10, Strike price = $10, volatility = 20%, riskfree rate = 4%, and Term = 1.0 year
#12.03 (d) What is the delta of a call option?
Using the Black Scholes Merton model, Hull gets 0.6179 as the value of the call option.
However, using the Binomial risk-neutral method, I get 0.55. Hull states that the ATM call option has a delta of 0.5 to 0.6.
My question is when do I use the former and when do I use the latter, given that there is no information that the time steps have been increased in such a way that the Binomial Trees method converges to the BSM
Thanks!
Jayanthi
As referenced above:
Given the following data: Stock price = $10, Strike price = $10, volatility = 20%, riskfree rate = 4%, and Term = 1.0 year
#12.03 (d) What is the delta of a call option?
Using the Black Scholes Merton model, Hull gets 0.6179 as the value of the call option.
However, using the Binomial risk-neutral method, I get 0.55. Hull states that the ATM call option has a delta of 0.5 to 0.6.
My question is when do I use the former and when do I use the latter, given that there is no information that the time steps have been increased in such a way that the Binomial Trees method converges to the BSM
Thanks!
Jayanthi