stock market    online trading
10 Yr. T-Note

(0.00%)
S&P 500

(0.00%)
NASDAQ

(0.00%)

When you buy stocks it is very important to understand barrier option.

Barrier option

PDF Print E-mail

In finance, a barrier option is a type of financial option where the option to exercise depends on the underlying crossing or reaching a given barrier level. Barrier options are always cheaper than a similar option without barrier. Barrier options were created to provide the insurance value of an option without charging as much premium. For example, if you believe that IBM will go up this year, but are willing to bet that it won't go above $100, then you can buy the barrier and pay less premium than the vanilla option.

Types

Barrier options are path-dependent exotics that are similar in some ways to ordinary options. There are put and call, as well as European and American varieties. But they become activated or, on the contrary, null and void only if the underlier reaches a predetermined level (barrier).

"In" options start their lives worthless and only become active in the event a predetermined knock-in barrier price is breached. "Out" options start their lives active and become null and void in the event a certain knock-out barrier price is breached.

In either case, if the option expires inactive, then there may be a cash rebate paid out. This could be nothing, in which case the option ends up worthless, or it could be some fraction of the premium.

The four main types of barrier options are:

  • Up-and-out: spot price starts below the barrier level and has to move up for the option to be knocked out.
  • Down-and-out: spot price starts above the barrier level and has to move down for the option to become null and void.
  • Up-and-in: spot price starts below the barrier level and has to move up for the option to become activated.
  • Down-and-in: spot price starts above the barrier level and has to move down for the option to become activated.

For example, a European call option may be written on an underlying with spot price of $100, and a knockout barrier of $120. This option behaves in every way like a vanilla European call, except if the spot price ever moves above $120, the option "knocks out" and the contract is null and void. Note that the option does not reactivate if the spot price falls below $120 again. Once it is out, it's out for good.

In-out parity is the barrier option's answer to put-call parity. If we combine one "in" option and one "out" barrier option with the same strikes and expirations, we get the price of a vanilla option: C = Cin + Cout. A simple arbitrage argument—simultaneously holding the "in" and the "out" option guarantees that one and only one of the two will pay off. The argument only works for European options without rebate.

Barrier events

A barrier event occurs when the underlying crosses the barrier level. While it seems straightforward to define a barrier event as "underlying trades at or above a given level," in reality it's not so simple. What if the underlying only trades at the level for a single trade? How big would that trade have to be? Would it have to be on an exchange or could it be between private parties? When barrier options were first introduced to options markets, many banks had legal trouble resulting from a mismatched understanding with their counterparties regarding exactly what constituted a barrier event.

Variations

Barrier options are sometimes accompanied by a rebate, which is a payoff to the option holder in case of a barrier event. Rebates can either be paid at the time of the event or at expiration.

A discrete barrier is one for which the barrier event is considered at discrete times, rather than the normal continuous barrier case.

A Parisian option is a barrier option where the barrier condition applies only once the price of the underlying instrument has spent at least a given period of time on the wrong side of the barrier.

Barrier options can have either American or European exercise style.

Valuation

The valuation of barrier options can be tricky, because unlike other simpler options they are path-dependent – that is, the value of the option at any time depends not just on the underlying at that point, but also on the path taken by the underlying (since, if it has crossed the barrier, a barrier event has occurred). Although the classical Black-Scholes approach does not directly apply, several more complex methods can be used:

  • The simplest way to value barrier options is using a static replicating portfolio of vanilla options (which can be valued with Black-Scholes), so chosen so as to mimic the value of the barrier at expiry and at selected discrete points in time along the barrier. This approach was pioneered by Peter Carr and gives closed form prices and replication strategies for all types of barrier options.
  • Another approach is to study the law of the maximum (or minimum) of the underlying. This approach gives explicit (closed form) prices to barrier options.
  • Yet another method is the PDE approach. The PDE satisfied by an out barrier options is the same one satisfied by a vanilla option under Black and Scholes assumptions, with extra boundary conditions demanding that the option becomes worthless when the underlying touches the barrier.
  • When an exact formula is difficult to obtain, barrier options can be priced with the Monte Carlo option model. However, computing the greeks (sensitivities) using this approach is numerically unstable.
  • A faster approach is to use finite-differencing techniques to diffuse the PDE backwards from the boundary condition (which is the terminal payoff at expiry, plus the condition that the value along the barrier is always 0 at any time). Both explicit finite-differencing methods and the Crank–Nicolson scheme have their advantages.

Barrier option Topic - Options

In finance, an option is a contract between a buyer and a seller that gives the buyer the right, but not the obligation, to buy or to sell a particular asset (the underlying asset) on or before the option's expiration time, at an agreed price, the strike price. In return for granting the option, the seller collects a payment (the premium) from the buyer. A call option gives the buyer the right to buy the underlying asset and a put option gives the buyer of the option the right to sell the underlying asset. If the buyer chooses to exercise this right, the seller is obliged to sell or buy the asset at the agreed price. The buyer may choose not to exercise the right and let it expire. The underlying asset can be a piece of property, a security (stock or bond), or a derivative instrument, such as a futures contract.


 
Home
Take me Home Mrs. Juno
About Juno
Want to know more about us?  How we started?  The People?
Advertising
Advertising Ideas? Feel free to click on Contact Us and tell us about it. We are not going to pollute our home page with your banner though.
Privacy Policy
We take your privacy extremely serious.

Online Trading Articles
General articles about online trading, stock brokers, stock trading and options trading.
Software
Take a look at all of the online trading and day trading software we have, true innovation at $4.95 a trade.
Contact Us
We are here to Help!
Help
We have a ton of questions already answered if you want to look yourself.

PLEASE READ THE IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES BELOW.

Securities products and services offered by Transcend Capital, LLC, a registered broker dealer, Member FINRA/SIPC.
6500 River Place Blvd., Bldg. 4, Ste. 102, Austin, TX 78730. 512-623-7774.

The information contained on this Web site does not constitute an offer to buy or sell, or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell securities. No information found on this Web site should be construed by any consumer as investment advice, tax advice or a recommendation or solicitation to effect or attempt to effect transactions in securities.

Symbols and price and volume data shown here are for illustrative purposes only. Transcend Capital and/or its employees and/or officers may have positions in securities referenced herein, and may, as principal or agent, buy from or sell to clients. Account access, trade executions, and system response may be adversely affected by market conditions, quote delays, system performance, and other factors.

Any specific securities, or types of securities, used as examples are for demonstration purposes only. None of the information provided should be considered a recommendation or solicitation to invest in, or liquidate, a particular security or type of security.

Options carry a high level of risk and are not suitable for all investors. Please read the Options Disclosures Document Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options before considering any option transaction

Certain requirements must be met to trade options at Transcend Capital. With long options, investors may lose 100% of funds invested. Multiple leg options strategies will involve multiple commissions. Spread trading must be done in a margin account. Please read the Options Disclosure Document titled Characteristics and Risks of Standardized Options before considering any option transaction.

Diversification and Asset Allocation strategies do not ensure a profit and cannot protect against losses in a declining market. While an investment in a specific sector may involve a greater degree of risk than an investment with greater diversification, strategies that include broadly diversified portfolios do not ensure a profit and do not protect against losses.

Additional advanced options education is available from the OIC.

Transcend Capital, LLC and JunoTrade Corporation are not legally affiliated.


stock market
User Name/Password do not match.
Please enter a Valid User Name and Password.
Forgot your Password?
Enter your Email Address in the form below and select 'Reset' and we will ask you to answer your Security Question before we Email a temporary password to you.

Email Address:

Forgot your Email Address?
Please call 1-800-284-8114 with you Account number and your personal information including the answer to your Security Question.