David's ProTip: I learned from Carol Alexander a useful semantic distinction (not in Hull). Consider a position in 100 call options with per-option delta of 0.6:
This is robust, for example:
- The Percentage Delta is 0.6; this is the unitless first partial derivative, dc/dS
- The Position Delta is 60 because Position Delta = Quantity * Percentage Delta.
- If we are long, we use (+) quantity: Position Delta (long 100 calls) = +100 * 0.6 = +60;
- If we are short , we use (-) quantity: Position Delta (short 100 calls) = -100 * 0.6 = -60
- To neutralize is to get the position Greek to zero
Just as we use dollar duration (not modified duration) to neutralize duration in the portfolio, we neutralize an option Greek by summing Position Greeks to zero. I often see candidates trying to neutralize with percentage delta directly, but you can't, you need to sum the "Position" Greeks. I hope that's useful! David
- Selling puts increases position delta because -QTY * -% delta = +position delta; i.e., % delta of puts always negative; % delta of calls is always positive
- Selling calls or puts decreases position gamma because -QTY * +% gamma = - position gamma; i.e., % gamma is always positive for both calls & puts