Files
ollama-model-training-5060ti/training_data/curated/text/1648dff9247fef86c005adde86671e65d2950b42b27e41e1342a7b57b8ff9798.txt

14 lines
899 B
Plaintext
Raw Permalink Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters
This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.
Theta
Option buying is a veritable race against the clock. With each passing day,
the option loses theoretical value. Refer back to Exhibit 4.3 . When three
weeks pass and the time to expiration decreases from 44 days to 23, what
happens to the call value? If the stock price stays around its original level,
theta will be responsible for a loss of about 30 percent of the premium. If
Disney is at $35 with 23 days to expiration, the call will be worth $0.73.
With a big enough move in either direction, however, theta matters much
less.
With 23 days to expiration and Disney at $39, there is only 0.12 of time
value—the premium paid over parity for the option. At that point, it is
almost all delta exposure. Similarly, if the Disney stock price falls after
three weeks to $33, the call will have only 0.10 of time value. Time decay is
the least of Kims concerns if the stock makes a big move.