4.4  Portfolio Insurance Problem

Hedging a Portfolio with a Put Option

Suppose you are managing a stock portfolio, and want to ensure that its value does not fall below some level, Y, at the end of the next three months.  One way to do this is to buy the put option on the portfolio with strike price (X) which is greater than or equal to Y and has a maturity equal to three months.

Suppose you choose the strike X such that the gain from the put option (net of its cost) is zero at Y as depicted in Figure 4.6.

Figure 4.6

Portfolio Insurance:  Put Options

Gains and losses are shown relative to the target floor Y.  That is, the portfolio of +1S shows zero gain or loss at Y and gains (losses) as its value moves above (below) Y.  The payoff from a put option with a strike price equal to X is depicted by the line labeled +1P.

At S = X, the put option is "at the money" (i.e., neither in-the-money nor out-of-the-money), but nevertheless you lose an amount equal to the initial cost of the put option. 

In the online text, the payoff from portfolio +1S+1P is depicted by the bold red line pointed to by one of the arrows in Figure 4.6.  The floor for this portfolio is at Y but gains are only realized above X.  This reflects the fact that portfolio insurance is not free.  Given the cost of the insurance, gains relative to Y must be given up in the interval [Y,X].

In this example, there has been a transfer of risk from you, the owner of the portfolio, to the writer of the put option.

Hedging Without a Put Option Market

The chances are, of course, that a put option on your particular stock portfolio is not traded, or is available only for a part of your portfolio.

If the portfolio value changes according to the binomial model, however, you can replicate any desired put option by creating a put option synthetically (i.e., by buying and selling stocks and bonds each period).  In fact, you already know that we can hold a synthetic put option on the portfolio by holding the delta of the stock portfolio and b bonds, where

When combined with your original position, this floor hedge implies that you hold

Remember that at each node in the tree, delta will change and therefore you will need to adjust this position at each node.  For the two-period problem, the tree is as shown in Figure 4.7,

Figure 4.7

Binomial Tree

We reproduce the delta at each node as follows:

As a result, the initial portfolio of  (1 + d) stocks and -b bonds must be rebalanced at the beginning of the second period.  The amount of rebalancing necessary will depend on whether  an uptick or a downtick occurs. When extended to the multi-period binomial model, you have to adjust your portfolio more and more frequently.  If it is costly to trade, as it is in the real world, the transaction costs can increase significantly.

Without such costs, however, this dynamic hedge provides the same protection as before, as shown in Figure 4.8.

 Figure 4.8

Portfolio Insurance:  Synthetic Put Option

 

Our analysis assumes perfect markets, and in particular that the trades implied by delta changes can actually be implemented.  In the 1987 "Black Monday" market crash, portfolio insurance fell out of favor because the re-trading implied by rapidly changing position deltas could not be achieved.

Through the binomial option pricing framework, you have become acquainted with the major insights from modern option pricing theory.  The practical implementation of this model, however, requires that more periods be added to the analysis.  This is covered in  Chapter 5, N-Period Binomial Option Pricing Model.

previous topic

next topic

(C) Copyright 1999, OS Financial Trading System