David:
Please clarify something. I came across a problem asking to price an American call option for a non-dividend stock using a 2-period model. Since this is non-dividend, we can use the exact same procedure as if we are valuing a European call option, correct?
Since it is never optimal to EARLY-exercise such an American call, we need not worry about comparing the payoff at the end of Period 1 vs the expected value of the call at the end of period 1. I understand we'd do this for an American put -- dividend or no dividend.
So, can I just charge ahead with the method for pricing a European call in such a case?
--sridhar
Please clarify something. I came across a problem asking to price an American call option for a non-dividend stock using a 2-period model. Since this is non-dividend, we can use the exact same procedure as if we are valuing a European call option, correct?
Since it is never optimal to EARLY-exercise such an American call, we need not worry about comparing the payoff at the end of Period 1 vs the expected value of the call at the end of period 1. I understand we'd do this for an American put -- dividend or no dividend.
So, can I just charge ahead with the method for pricing a European call in such a case?
--sridhar