Ask Statistics and Probability Expert

It is 11:30pm on Thursday evening, New York City time. You are still recovering from your long haul flight from Sydney which arrived at JFK only hours ago. Thank your favourite deity the flight attendant tucked you into your first class cabin bed (say no more) otherwise you wouldn't have had the energy to pop up Fifth Avenue to pick up a casual outfit and make it downtown to Cipriani's this evening.

You drape yourself sleekly on the bar stool, in your brand new Dolce and Gabbana boots. Admiring them, your blood begins to boil at the thought of those primordial peasants who almost stepped on them as they scurried down to their subterranean destinations on the subway.

Your anxiety begins to grow. Luckily, the gorgeous Calvin Klein model sitting next to you hands you a Bellini and a Xanax. Intrigued by your Australian accent, the two of you begin talking about Australia's unsophisticated financial system.

You marvel at New York's sophisticated models (no pun intended). In this land of opportunity, the prices of their risky assets can be not just one of two, but one of three prices tomorrow!

Obviously curious about your excitement, two rather large gentlemen walk over to join your conversation. You immediately recognise one of them as the head of global equity research at Goldman-Sachs. You've done your homework. He snaps his fingers and a plate of antipasto arrives, served by the maitre de, no less.

 "We'll tell you how it's done, kid. I was on the phone to Rupert about 5 minutes ago and he told me that News Limited will either go up to $50, stay at $48 or go down to $45 tomorrow. That's greenbacks, pal. Not your damn monopoly money! Anyway, tomorrow's price all depends on whether a court ruling is made about Rupert having to pay those workers he fired. All this money he has spent on lawyers has had such a negative effect on his share price! I mean, I already told that son of a gun that if he employs the illegals, then it will cost him way less and he can fire 'em whenever he damn well wants! And just between you and me, kid, I already know tomorrow's outcome," he winks.

You wipe the drool from the right side of your mouth and attempt to price a News Limited call option expiring tomorrow with a strike price of $48.

a) Using a trinomial tree to represent the 3 possible states of the world tomorrow, can you find an equivalent martingale measure for the discounted News Limited stock price process? Is it unique? Assume that interest rates have been cut so low that r=0.

b) You observe that the market price for the call option is $3. Desperately, you try to set up a strategy which replicates the payoff of the call option. Can you do it?

Show your working. Do not turn the problem into a Binomial problem

c) Suddenly you realise another risky asset is available. Its price today is $5 and tomorrow it will either be $4, $5 or $6 depending on three completely separate states of the world to Rupert's three court outcomes (payout, no ruling, no payout). Let S1 be the News Limited stock and S2 be the other risky asset. Write out the sample space for S1 + S2.

d) Can you construct a replication strategy using the extra asset? If so, compute the price of the call option. Show your working.

e) Now assume that the other risky asset depends completely on Rupert's three court outcomes. So assume that the price today is $5 and it will go down to $4 if News Limited goes down, it will stay the same if News Limited stays the same or it will go up to $6 if News Limited goes up. Write out the joint sample space of the two stocks. Can you construct a replication strategy? If so, compute the price of the call option. Show your working.

Statistics and Probability, Statistics

  • Category:- Statistics and Probability
  • Reference No.:- M9525486

Have any Question?


Related Questions in Statistics and Probability

Introduction to epidemiology assignment -assignment should

Introduction to Epidemiology Assignment - Assignment should be typed, with adequate space left between questions. Read the following paper, and answer the questions below: Sundquist K., Qvist J. Johansson SE., Sundquist ...

Question 1 many high school students take the ap tests in

Question 1. Many high school students take the AP tests in different subject areas. In 2007, of the 144,796 students who took the biology exam 84,199 of them were female. In that same year,of the 211,693 students who too ...

Basic statisticsactivity 1define the following terms1

BASIC STATISTICS Activity 1 Define the following terms: 1. Statistics 2. Descriptive Statistics 3. Inferential Statistics 4. Population 5. Sample 6. Quantitative Data 7. Discrete Variable 8. Continuous Variable 9. Qualit ...

Question 1below you are given the examination scores of 20

Question 1 Below you are given the examination scores of 20 students (data set also provided in accompanying MS Excel file). 52 99 92 86 84 63 72 76 95 88 92 58 65 79 80 90 75 74 56 99 a. Construct a frequency distributi ...

Question 1 assume you have noted the following prices for

Question: 1. Assume you have noted the following prices for paperback books and the number of pages that each book contains. Develop a least-squares estimated regression line. i. Compute the coefficient of determination ...

Question 1 a sample of 81 account balances of a credit

Question 1: A sample of 81 account balances of a credit company showed an average balance of $1,200 with a standard deviation of $126. 1. Formulate the hypotheses that can be used to determine whether the mean of all acc ...

5 of females smoke cigarettes what is the probability that

5% of females smoke cigarettes. What is the probability that the proportion of smokers in a sample of 865 females would be greater than 3%

Armstrong faber produces a standard number-two pencil

Armstrong Faber produces a standard number-two pencil called Ultra-Lite. The demand for Ultra-Lite has been fairly stable over the past ten years. On average, Armstrong Faber has sold 457,000 pencils each year. Furthermo ...

Sppose a and b are collectively exhaustive in addition pa

Suppose A and B are collectively exhaustive. In addition, P(A) = 0.2 and P(B) = 0.8. Suppose C and D are both mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive. Further, P(C|A) = 0.7 and P(D|B) = 0.5. What are P(C) and P(D) ...

The time to complete 1 construction project for company a

The time to complete 1 construction project for company A is exponentially distributed with a mean of 1 year. Therefore: (a) What is the probability that a project will be finished in one and half years? (b) What is the ...

  • 4,153,160 Questions Asked
  • 13,132 Experts
  • 2,558,936 Questions Answered

Ask Experts for help!!

Looking for Assignment Help?

Start excelling in your Courses, Get help with Assignment

Write us your full requirement for evaluation and you will receive response within 20 minutes turnaround time.

Ask Now Help with Problems, Get a Best Answer

Why might a bank avoid the use of interest rate swaps even

Why might a bank avoid the use of interest rate swaps, even when the institution is exposed to significant interest rate

Describe the difference between zero coupon bonds and

Describe the difference between zero coupon bonds and coupon bonds. Under what conditions will a coupon bond sell at a p

Compute the present value of an annuity of 880 per year

Compute the present value of an annuity of $ 880 per year for 16 years, given a discount rate of 6 percent per annum. As

Compute the present value of an 1150 payment made in ten

Compute the present value of an $1,150 payment made in ten years when the discount rate is 12 percent. (Do not round int

Compute the present value of an annuity of 699 per year

Compute the present value of an annuity of $ 699 per year for 19 years, given a discount rate of 6 percent per annum. As