Options pricing (basic question)

Discussion in 'Options' started by TD877, Oct 13, 2016.

  1. TD877

    TD877

    When looking at contracts with the same expiration date, I would expect a call option that's $5 out of the money to be priced the same as a put option that's $5 out the money, but I often see discrepancies (most often with the call priced higher). Does this in anyway signal that buyers of options think the stock will rise?

    When you look online about using options to predict spot moves, I basically just see information on put/call volume ratio, but why isn't the above used?
     
  2. look up skew... many times because of the behavior of the underlying , the market demand creates a skew.. meaning a higher price for puts then calls... in commodities its many times the opposite
     
    Windlesham1 and TD877 like this.
  3. Dividends are a factor in options pricing
     
  4. If you observe the IV surface for CALL's VS PUT's, you will observe that the lowest IV values for Calls are OTM (near a Moneyness value of about -0.2), while the lowest IV values for Puts are ITM (near a Moneyness value of between +0.1 and +0.2).
    A couple graphs below to add to the confusion. ;-)
    upload_2016-10-13_15-9-17.png
    upload_2016-10-13_15-10-8.png

    The RED dots are Mid-point IV for options with NO volume. The GREEN dots are Mid-point IV for options with >0 volume. The Back dots (only for the PUT graph) use Forward price for IV instead of spot price.
     
    TD877 likes this.
  5. CyJackX

    CyJackX

    Yeah, it's just skew. There are theoretical ideals for options pricing, but the market will set its own standards.
     
    cdcaveman likes this.
  6. water7

    water7

    just rephrasing the original question..
    can the skewness predict a certain behavior / price movement?
     
  7. sle

    sle

    Well, skew means that people are more interested in owning optionality in one direction then the other. you can interpret it in a variety of ways, to name a few:
    1. people expect the terminal distribution to be skewed
    2. people expect more volatility in one direction then the other
    3. people are positioned one way and buy options to protect themselfs
    etc...
     
    cdcaveman likes this.
  8. I like how you used "people" as its market demand and not the idea that its some model output, which it isn't... Prices are a function of "people" and their views and expectations of the market
     
    #10     Oct 16, 2016