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Understanding and Managing Leverage 171
upward movement in the stock will offset the money spent on time value,
the amount spent on time value is never recoverable.
The remaining $11.25 of the premium paid for a $20-strike call op-
tion is intrinsic value . Buying intrinsic value means that we are exposing
our own capital to the risk of an unrealized loss if the stock falls below
$31.25. Lambda is directly related to the amount of capital we are exposing
to an unrealized loss versus the size of the “loan” from the option, so be-
cause we are risking $11.25 of our own capital and borrowing $20 with the
option (a high capital-to-loan proportion), our investment leverage meas-
ured by lambda is a relatively low 2.50.
Now direct your attention to a far OTM call option—the one struck
at $39. If we invest in the $39-strike option, we are again effectively
taking out a $39 contingent loan to buy the shares. Again, we take the
time-value portion of the options price—in this case the entire premi-
um of $1.28—to be the prepaid interest (an implied annualized rate of
6.3 percent) and note that we are exposing none of our own capital to
the risk of an unrealized loss. Because we are subjecting none of our
own capital in this investment and taking out a large loan, our invest-
ment leverage soars to a very high value of 15.63. This implies that a
1 percentage point move in the underlying stock will boost our invest-
ment return by over 15 percent!
Obviously, these calculations tell us that our investment returns are
going to be much more volatile for small changes in the underlyings price
when buying far OTM options than when buying far ITM options. This is
fine information for someone interested in more speculative strategies—if
a speculator has the sense that a stock will rise quickly, he or she could,
rather than buying the stock, buy OTM options, and if the stock went up
fast enough and soon enough offset any drop of implied volatility and time
decay, he or she would pocket a nice, highly levered profit.
However, there are several factors that limit the usefulness of lambda.
First, because delta is not a constant, the leverage factor does not stay put
as the stock moves around. For someone who intends to hold a position for
a longer time, then, lambda provides little information regarding how the
position will perform over their investment horizon.
In addition, reading the preceding descriptions of lambda, it is ob-
vious that this measure deals exclusively with the percentage change in