Delta of an option with dividend given N(d1)

hsuwang

Member
Hello David,

I'm wondering if this is a fair question to ask:

You are given the following information about a call option:
Time to maturity: 2 years
Continuous risk-free rate: 4%
Continuous dividend yield: 1%
N(d1) = .64

Calculate the delta of this option.

The answer is N(d1)exp-q(t), however, did we touch on this concept in the curriculum?

Thanks!
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
Hi Jack,

Yes, that sort of question could be asked (is indeed "fair game")
While i reviewed delta, I did not review delta with dividend (but I wish I had, and will make a note; next version I will).
I think i decided to show delta of forward/futures, instead ....but this should be covered, too...

Thanks, David
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
@enjofaes Oh, I see. Given N(z) - 1 = -N(-z), I think [N(d1)-1]*exp(-qT) = -N(-z)*exp(-qT) is the equivalent expression for the put's delta; e.g.,
  • if z = 1, then N(z) = 84.1% and N(z) - 1 = -15.9%;
  • N(-z) = N(-1) = 15.9% but -N(-1) = -15.9%. Same as your just with a negative in front, thanks for finding a second way to put delta!
 
Top