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23. Options Markets
Financial Markets (ECON 252)
Options introduce an essential nonlineary into portfolio management. They are contracts between buyers and writers, who agree on exercise prices and dates at which the buyer can buy or sell the underlying (such as a stock). Options are priced based on the price and volatility of the underlying asset as well as the duration of the option contract. The Black-Scholes options pricing model is one of the most famous equations in finance and offers a useful first approximation for prices for option contracts. Options exchanges and futures exchanges both are involved in creating a liquid and transparent market for options. Options are not just for stocks; they are also important for other asset classes, such as real estate.
00:00 - Chapter 1. Options Vocabulary and the 1720 Stock Market Crash
14:58 - Chapter 2. The Standardization and Logic of Options: Options Exchanges
27:57 - Chapter 3. The Put-Call Parity Relation
36:32 - Chapter 4. Pricing an Option: The Black-Scholes Formula
51:35 - Chapter 5. Accounting for Volatility in the Black-Scholes Formula
01:00:08 - Chapter 6. Options on Home Prices as Risk Management
Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses
This course was recorded in Spring 2008.
Channel: Education
Uploaded: November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am
Author: YaleCourses
Length: 07:51
Rating: N/A
Views: 40510
Tags: American option arbitrage Black-Scholes formula call European exercise date price futures exchange implied volatility money intrinsic value options contract put strike
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