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The Black and Scholes Model

The Black and Scholes Option Pricing Model was developed by Fischer Black and Myron Scholes to value options. It built upon previous work by A. James Boness and improved it by proving the risk-free interest rate is the correct discount factor. The model divides the option value into two parts: the expected benefit from acquiring the stock, and the present value of paying the exercise price. It makes assumptions such as the stock pays no dividends, options can only be exercised at expiration, markets are efficient, no commissions are charged, interest rates are constant, and returns are lognormally distributed.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
168 views2 pages

The Black and Scholes Model

The Black and Scholes Option Pricing Model was developed by Fischer Black and Myron Scholes to value options. It built upon previous work by A. James Boness and improved it by proving the risk-free interest rate is the correct discount factor. The model divides the option value into two parts: the expected benefit from acquiring the stock, and the present value of paying the exercise price. It makes assumptions such as the stock pays no dividends, options can only be exercised at expiration, markets are efficient, no commissions are charged, interest rates are constant, and returns are lognormally distributed.

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The Black and Scholes Model:

The Black and Scholes Option Pricing Model didn't appear overnight, in fact, Fisher Black
started out working to create a valuation model for stock warrants. This work involved
calculating a derivative to measure how the discount rate of a warrant varies with time and stock
price. The result of this calculation held a striking resemblance to a well-known heat transfer
equation. Soon after this discovery, Myron Scholes joined Black and the result of their work is a
startlingly accurate option pricing model. Black and Scholes can't take all credit for their work,
in fact their model is actually an improved version of a previous model developed by A. James
Boness in his Ph.D. dissertation at the University of Chicago. Black and Scholes' improvements
on the Boness model come in the form of a proof that the risk-free interest rate is the correct
discount factor, and with the absence of assumptions regarding investor's risk preferences.

In order to understand the model itself, we divide it into two parts. The first part, SN(d1), derives
the expected benefit from acquiring a stock outright. This is found by multiplying stock price [S]
by the change in the call premium with respect to a change in the underlying stock price [N(d1)].
The second part of the model, Ke(-rt)N(d2), gives the present value of paying the exercise price
on the expiration day. The fair market value of the call option is then calculated by taking the
difference between these two parts.

Assumptions of the Black and Scholes Model:


1) The stock pays no dividends during the option's life

Most companies pay dividends to their share holders, so this might seem a serious limitation to
the model considering the observation that higher dividend yields elicit lower call premiums. A
common way of adjusting the model for this situation is to subtract the discounted value of a
future dividend from the stock price.
2) European exercise terms are used
European exercise terms dictate that the option can only be exercised on the expiration date.
American exercise term allow the option to be exercised at any time during the life of the option,
making american options more valuable due to their greater flexibility. This limitation is not a
major concern because very few calls are ever exercised before the last few days of their life.
This is true because when you exercise a call early, you forfeit the remaining time value on the
call and collect the intrinsic value. Towards the end of the life of a call, the remaining time value
is very small, but the intrinsic value is the same.
3) Markets are efficient
This assumption suggests that people cannot consistently predict the direction of the market or an
individual stock. The market operates continuously with share prices following a continuous It
process. To understand what a continuous It process is, you must first know that a Markov
process is "one where the observation in time period t depends only on the preceding
observation." An It process is simply a Markov process in continuous time. If you were to draw
a continuous process you would do so without picking the pen up from the piece of paper.
4) No commissions are charged
Usually market participants do have to pay a commission to buy or sell options. Even floor
traders pay some kind of fee, but it is usually very small. The fees that Individual investor's pay
is more substantial and can often distort the output of the model.
5) Interest rates remain constant and known
The Black and Scholes model uses the risk-free rate to represent this constant and known rate. In
reality there is no such thing as the risk-free rate, but the discount rate on U.S. Government
Treasury Bills with 30 days left until maturity is usually used to represent it. During periods of
rapidly changing interest rates, these 30 day rates are often subject to change, thereby violating
one of the assumptions of the model.
6) Returns are lognormally distributed
This assumption suggests, returns on the underlying stock are normally distributed, which is
reasonable for most assets that offer options.

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