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Chapter 37: How Volatility Affeds Popular Strategies
TABLE 37-3
Implied
Stock Price Volatility
50 10%
30%
50%
70%
100%
150%
200%
Theoretical
Coll Price
1.34
3.31
5.28
7.25
10.16
14.90
19.41
753
Vega
0.097
0.099
0.099
0.098
0.096
0.093
0.088
of a 6-month call option with differing implied volatilities. Suppose one buys an
option that currently has implied volatility of 170% (the top curve on the graph).
Later, investor perceptions of volatility diminish, and the option is trading with an
implied volatility of 140%. That means that the option is now "residing" on the sec­
ond curve from the top of the list. Judging from the general distance between those
two curves, the option has probably lost between 5 and 8 points of value due to the
drop in implied volatility.
Here's another way to think about it. Again, suppose one buys an at-the-money
option (stock price = 100) when its implied volatility is 170%. That option value is
marked as point A on the graph in Figure 37-1. Later, the option's implied volatility
drops to 140%. How much does the stock have to rise in order to overcome the loss
of implied volatility? The horizontal line from point A to point B shows that the
option value is the same on each line. Then, dropping a vertical line from B down to
point C, we see that point C is at a stock price of about 109. Thus, the stock would
have to rise 9 points just to keep the option value constant, if implied volatility drops
from 170% to 140%.
IMPLIED VOLATILITY AND DELTA
Figure 37-1 shows another rather unusual effect: When implied volatility gets very
high, the delta of the option doesn't change much. Simplistically, the delta of an
option measures how much the option changes in price when the stock moves one
point. Mathematically, the delta is the first partial derivative of the option model with
respect to stock price. Geometrically, that means that the delta of an option is the
slope of a line drawn tangent to the curve in the preceding chart.