I'm going crazy trying to understand what I'm not doing right here, and I think it's my unfamiliarity with using or understanding Black Scholes model. But anyway, would appreciate if anyone can help.
In the first paragraph under the subsection "Nonlinear Derivatives" Allen gives an example of an option's price according to the Black-Scholes option pricing formula. The section begins as "The primary example for a nonlinear derivative is an option. Consider for example an..."
risk free rate=5%
T=.5 0r 6 months
Non dividend paying stock
price =$100
Strike=$100
volatility=20% per annum
value of the call option = $6.89. I simply cannot get this calc and I don't know why, I'm thinking its bc of the above reasons and maybe I'm assuming N to be 1.
I'm having issues moving ahead with understanding the chapter when I can't do a simple calculation right...
Any help appreciated.
Thanks,
Ryan
In the first paragraph under the subsection "Nonlinear Derivatives" Allen gives an example of an option's price according to the Black-Scholes option pricing formula. The section begins as "The primary example for a nonlinear derivative is an option. Consider for example an..."
risk free rate=5%
T=.5 0r 6 months
Non dividend paying stock
price =$100
Strike=$100
volatility=20% per annum
value of the call option = $6.89. I simply cannot get this calc and I don't know why, I'm thinking its bc of the above reasons and maybe I'm assuming N to be 1.
I'm having issues moving ahead with understanding the chapter when I can't do a simple calculation right...
Any help appreciated.
Thanks,
Ryan