Winners of the 1997 Nobel Prizes in Economy
The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences has decided to award the Bank ofSweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1997, to Professor
Robert C. Merton, Harvard University, and to Professor Myron S. Scholes,
Stanford University, jointly. The prize was awarded for a new method to
determine the value of derivatives.
This sounds like a trifle achievement - but it is not. It touches upon
the very heart of the science of Economics: the concept of Risk. Risk reflects
the effect on the value of an asset where there is an option to change it (the
value) in the future.
We could be talking about a physical assets or a non-tangible asset,
such as a contract between two parties. An asset is also an investment, an
insurance policy, a bank guarantee and any other form of contingent liability,
corporate or not.
Scholes himself said that his formula is good for any situation
involving a contract whose value depends on the (uncertain) future value of an
asset.
The discipline of risk management is relatively old. As early as 200
years ago households and firms were able to defray their risk and to maintain a
level of risk acceptable to them by redistributing risks towards other agents
who were willing and able to assume them. In the financial markets this is done
by using derivative securities options, futures and others. Futures and
forwards hedge against future (potential - all risks are potentials) risks. These
are contracts which promise a future delivery of a certain item at a certain
price no later than a given date. Firms can thus sell their future production
(agricultural produce, minerals) in advance at the futures market specific to
their goods. The risk of future price movements is re-allocated, this way, from
the producer or manufacturer to the buyer of the contract. Options are designed
to hedge against one-sided risks; they represent the right, but not the
obligation, to buy or sell something at a pre-determined price in the future.
An importer that has to make a large payment in a foreign currency can suffer
large losses due to a future depreciation of his domestic currency. He can
avoid these losses by buying call options for the foreign currency on the
market for foreign currency options (and, obviously, pay the correct price for
them).
Fischer Black, Robert Merton and Myron Scholes developed a method of
correctly pricing derivatives. Their work in the early 1970s proposed a
solution to a crucial problem in financing theory: what is the best (=correctly
or minimally priced) way of dealing with financial risk. It was this solution
which brought about the rapid growth of markets for derivatives in the last two
decades. Fischer Black died in August 1995, in his early fifties. Had he lived
longer, he most definitely would have shared the Nobel Prize.
Black, Merton and Scholes can be applied to a number of economic
contracts and decisions which can be construed as options. Any investment may
provide opportunities (options) to expand into new markets in the future. Their
methodology can be used to value things as diverse as investments, insurance
policies and guarantees.
Valuing Financial Options
One of the earliest efforts to determine the value of stock options was
made by Louis Bachelier in his Ph.D. thesis at the Sorbonne in 1900. His
formula was based on unrealistic assumptions such as a zero interest rate and
negative share prices.
Still, scholars like Case Sprenkle, James Boness and Paul Samuelson used
his formula. They introduced several now universally accepted assumptions: that
stock prices are normally distributed (which guarantees that share prices are
positive), a non-zero (negative or positive) interest rate, the risk aversion
of investors, the existence of a risk premium (on top of the risk-free interest
rate). In 1964, Boness came up with a formula which was very similar to the
Black-Scholes formula. Yet, it still incorporated compensation for the risk
associated with a stock through an unknown interest rate.
Prior to 1973, people discounted (capitalized) the expected value of a
stock option at expiration. They used arbitrary risk premiums in the
discounting process. The risk premium represented the volatility of the
underlying stock.
In other words, it represented the chances to find the price of the
stock within a given range of prices on expiration. It did not represent the
investors' risk aversion, something which is impossible to observe in reality.
The Black and Scholes Formula
The revolution brought about by Merton, Black and Scholes was
recognizing that it is not necessary to use any risk premium when valuing an
option because it is already included in the price of the stock. In 1973
Fischer Black and Myron S. Scholes published the famous option pricing Black
and Scholes formula. Merton extended it in 1973.
The idea was simple: a formula for option valuation should determine
exactly how the value of the option depends on the current share price
(professionally called the "delta" of the option). A delta of 1 means
that a $1 increase or decrease in the price of the share is translated to a $1
identical movement in the price of the option.
An investor that holds the share and wants to protect himself against
the changes in its price can eliminate the risk by selling (writing) options as
the number of shares he owns. If the share price increases, the investor will
make a profit on the shares which will be identical to the losses on the
options. The seller of an option incurs losses when the share price goes up,
because he has to pay money to the people who bought it or give to them the
shares at a price that is lower than the market price - the strike price of the
option. The reverse is true for decreases in the share price. Yet, the money
received by the investor from the buyers of the options that he sold is
invested. Altogether, the investor should receive a yield equivalent to the
yield on risk free investments (for instance, treasury bills).
Changes in the share price and drawing nearer to the maturity
(expiration) date of the option changes the delta of the option. The investor
has to change the portfolio of his investments (shares, sold options and the
money received from the option buyers) to account for this changing delta.
This is the first unrealistic assumption of Black, Merton and Scholes:
that the investor can trade continuously without any transaction costs (though
others amended the formula later).
According to their formula, the value of a call option is given by the
difference between the expected share price and the expected cost if the option
is exercised. The value of the option is higher, the higher the current share
price, the higher the volatility of the share price (as measured by its
standard deviation), the higher the risk-free interest rate, the longer the
time to maturity, the lower the strike price, and the higher the probability
that the option will be exercised.
All the parameters in the equation are observable except the volatility
, which has to be estimated from market data. If the price of the call option
is known, the formula can be used to solve for the market's estimate of the
share volatility.
Merton contributed to this revolutionary thinking by saying that to
evaluate stock options, the market does not need to be in equilibrium. It is
sufficient that no arbitrage opportunities will arise (namely, that the market
will price the share and the option correctly). So, Merton was not afraid to
include a fluctuating (stochastic) interest rate in HIS treatment of the Black
and Scholes formula.
His much more flexible approach also fitted more complex types of
options (known as synthetic options - created by buying or selling two
unrelated securities).
Theory and Practice
The Nobel laureates succeeded to solve a problem more than 70 years old.
But their contribution had both theoretical and practical importance. It
assisted in solving many economic problems, to price derivatives and to
valuation in other areas. Their method has been used to determine the value of
currency options, interest rate options, options on futures, and so on.
Today, we no longer use the original formula. The interest rate in
modern theories is stochastic, the volatility of the share price varies
stochastically over time, prices develop in jumps, transaction costs are taken
into account and prices can be controlled (e.g. currencies are restricted to
move inside bands in many countries).
Specific Applications of the Formula: Corporate Liabilities
A share can be thought of as an option on the firm. If the value of the
firm is lower than the value of its maturing debt, the shareholders have the
right, but not the obligation, to repay the loans. We can, therefore, use the
Black and Scholes to value shares, even when are not traded. Shares are
liabilities of the firm and all other liabilities can be treated the same way.
In financial contract theory the methodology has been used to design
optimal financial contracts, taking into account various aspects of bankruptcy
law.
Investment evaluation Flexibility is a key factor in a successful choice
between investments. Let us take a surprising example: equipment differs in its
flexibility - some equipment can be deactivated and reactivated at will (as the
market price of the product fluctuates), uses different sources of energy with
varying relative prices (example: the relative prices of oil versus electricity),
etc. This kind of equipment is really an option: to operate or to shut down, to
use oil or electricity).
The Black and Scholes formula could help make the right decision.
Guarantees and Insurance Contracts
Insurance policies and financial (and non financial) guarantees can be
evaluated using option-pricing theory. Insurance against the non-payment of a
debt security is equivalent to a put option on the debt security with a strike
price that is equal to the nominal value of the security. A real put option
would provide its holder with the right to sell the debt security if its value
declines below the strike price.
Put differently, the put option owner has the possibility to limit his
losses.
Option contracts are, indeed, a kind of insurance contracts and the two
markets are competing.
Complete Markets
Merton (1977) extend the dynamic theory of financial markets. In the
1950s, Kenneth Arrow and Gerard Debreu (both Nobel Prize winners) demonstrated
that individuals, households and firms can abolish their risk: if there exist
as many independent securities as there are future states of the world (a quite
large number). Merton proved that far fewer financial instruments are
sufficient to eliminate risk, even when the number of future states is very large.
Practical Importance
Option contracts began to be traded on the Chicago Board Options
Exchange (CBOE) in April 1973, one month before the formula was published.
It was only in 1975 that traders had begun applying it - using
programmed calculators. Thousands of traders and investors use the formula
daily in markets throughout the world. In many countries, it is mandatory by
law to use the formula to price stock warrants and options. In Israel, the
formula must be included and explained in every public offering prospectus.
Today, we cannot conceive of the financial world without the formula.
Investment portfolio managers use put options to hedge against a decline
in share prices. Companies use derivative instruments to fight currency,
interest rates and other financial risks. Banks and other financial
institutions use it to price (even to characterize) new products, offer
customized financial solutions and instruments to their clients and to minimize
their own risks.
Some Other Scientific Contributions
The work of Merton and Scholes was not confined to inventing the
formula.
Merton analysed individual consumption and investment decisions in
continuous time. He generalized an important asset pricing model called the
CAPM and gave it a dynamic form. He applied option pricing formulas in
different fields.
He is most known for deriving a formula which allows stock price
movements to be discontinuous.
Scholes studied the effect of dividends on share prices and estimated
the risks associated with the share which are not specific to it. He is a great
guru of the efficient marketplace ("The Invisible Hand of the
Market").
BY EDSON CANO
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