enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Exotic option - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exotic_option

    A straight call or put option, either American or European, would be considered a non-exotic or vanilla option. There are two general types of exotic options: path-independent and path-dependent. An option is path-independent if its value depends only on the final price of the underlying instrument.

  3. Vanna–Volga pricing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanna–Volga_pricing

    The rationale behind the above formulation of the Vanna-Volga price is that one can extract the smile cost of an exotic option by measuring the smile cost of a portfolio designed to hedge its Vanna and Volga risks. The reason why one chooses the strategies BF and RR to do this is because they are liquid FX instruments and they carry mainly ...

  4. Option style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Option_style

    An Asian option (or average option) is an option where the payoff is not determined by the underlying price at maturity but by the average underlying price over some pre-set period of time. For example, an Asian call option might pay MAX(DAILY_AVERAGE_OVER_LAST_THREE_MONTHS(S) − K, 0).

  5. Timer Call - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timer_Call

    The Timer Call is an Exotic option, that allows buyers to specify the level of volatility used to price the instrument.. As with many leading ideas, the principle of the timer call is remarkably simple: instead of a dealer needing to use an implied volatility to use in pricing the option, the volatility is fixed, and the maturity is left floating.

  6. Exotic derivative - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exotic_derivative

    An exotic derivative, in finance, is a derivative which is more complex than commonly traded "vanilla" products. This complexity usually relates to determination of payoff; [ 1 ] see option style . The category may also include derivatives with a non-standard subject matter - i.e., underlying - developed for a particular client or a particular ...

  7. How implied volatility works with options trading

    www.aol.com/finance/implied-volatility-works...

    An option’s implied volatility (IV) gauges the market’s expectation of the underlying stock’s future price swings, but it doesn’t predict the direction of those movements.

  8. Lookback option - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lookback_option

    Lookback options, in the terminology of finance, are a type of exotic option with path dependency, among many other kind of options. The payoff depends on the optimal (maximum or minimum) underlying asset's price occurring over the life of the option. The option allows the holder to "look back" over time to determine the payoff.

  9. Barrier option - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrier_option

    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.