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While the math behind options-pricing models may seem daunting, the underlying concepts are not. The variables used to calculate a fair value for a stock option are the price of the underlying stock, volatility, time, dividends, and interest rates. The first three deservedly get most of the attention because they have the largest effect on option prices. But it is also important to understand how dividends and interest rates affect the price of a stock option, especially when deciding to exercise options early.

Key Takeaways

  • Dividends and interest rates are both components of options pricing models, and they affect calls and puts differently.
  • Call options have positive rho, so an increase in interest rates will increase their values, while decreasing the value of puts, which have negative rho.
  • Since stockholders, but not options holders, get paid dividends, when a stock goes ex-dividend, call prices decline and put prices rise.

Black-Scholes Doesn’t Account for Early Options Exercise

The first option pricing model, the Black-Scholes model, was designed to evaluate European options, which don’t permit early exercise. So Black and Scholes never addressed when to exercise an option early or how much the right of early exercise is worth. Being able to exercise an option at any time should theoretically make an American option more valuable than a similar European option, although in practice there is little difference in how they are traded.

Different models were developed to price American options accurately. Most of these are refined versions of the Black-Scholes model, adjusted to take into account dividends and the possibility of early exercise. To appreciate the difference, these adjustments can make you first need to understand when an option should be exercised early.

In a nutshell, an option should be exercised early when the option’s theoretical value is at parity, and its delta is exactly 100. That may sound complicated, but as we discuss the effects interest rates and dividends have on option prices, we will use an example to show when this occurs. First, let’s look at the effects interest rates have on option prices and how they can determine if you should exercise a put option early.

The Effects of Interest Rates

Rho measures the sensitivity of an option’s price to a change in interest rates. An increase in interest rates will drive up call premiums and cause put premiums to decrease. Thus, calls have positive rho while puts have negative rho.

To understand why you need to think about the effect of interest rates when comparing an option position to simply owning the stock. Since it is much cheaper to buy a call option than 100 shares of the stock, the call buyer is willing to pay more for the option when rates are relatively high, since they can invest the difference in the capital required between the two positions.

When interest rates are steadily falling to a point where the federal funds’ target is down to around 1.0% and short-term interest rates available to individuals are around 0.75% to 2.0% (like in late 2003), interest rates have a minimal effect on option prices. All the best option analysis models include interest rates in their calculations using a risk-free interest rate, such as U.S. Treasury rates.

Interest rates are the critical factor in determining whether to exercise a put option early. A stock put option becomes an early exercise candidate anytime the interest that could be earned on the proceeds from the sale of the stock at the strike price is large enough. Determining exactly when this happens is difficult since each individual has different opportunity costs, but it does mean early exercise for a stock put option can be optimal at any time, provided the interest earned becomes sufficiently great.

The Effects of Dividends

It’s easier to pinpoint how dividends affect early exercise. Cash dividends affect option prices through their effect on the underlying stock price. Because the stock price is expected to drop by the amount of the dividend on the ex-dividend date, high cash dividends imply lower call premiums and higher put premiums.

While the stock price itself usually undergoes a single adjustment by the amount of the dividend, option prices anticipate dividends to be paid in the weeks and months before they are announced. The dividends paid should be taken into account when calculating the theoretical price of an option and projecting your probable gain and loss when graphing a position. This applies to stock indices, as well. The dividends paid by all stocks in that index (adjusted for each stock’s weight in the index) should be taken into account when calculating the fair value of an index option.

Because dividends are critical to determining when it is optimal to exercise a stock call option early, both buyers and sellers of call options should consider the impact of dividends. Whoever owns the stock as of the ex-dividend date receives the cash dividend, so owners of call options may exercise in-the-money options early to capture the cash dividend. Early exercise makes sense for a call option only if the stock is expected to pay a dividend prior to the expiration date.

Traditionally, the option would be exercised optimally only on the day before the stock’s ex-dividend date. But changes in the tax laws regarding dividends mean it may be two days before the person exercising the call plans on holding the stock for 60 days to take advantage of the lower tax for dividends. To see why this is, let’s look at an example (ignoring the tax implications since it changes the timing only).

Exercising the Call Option Example

Say you own a call option with a strike price of 90 expiring in two weeks. The stock is currently trading at $100 and is expected to pay a $2 dividend tomorrow. The call option is deep in the money and should have a fair value of 10 and a delta of 1. So the option has essentially the same characteristics as the stock. You have three possible courses of action:

  1. Do nothing (hold the option),
  2. Exercise the option early, or
  3. Sell the option and buy 100 shares of stock.

Which of these choices is best? If you hold the option, it will maintain your delta position. But tomorrow the stock will open ex-dividend at 98 after the $2 dividend is deducted from its price. Since the option is at parity, it will open at a fair value of 8, the new parity price, and you will lose two points ($200) on the position.

If you exercise the option early, you lock in the 10 points of value. When the stock goes ex-dividend, you lose $2 per share when it opens two points lower, but also receive the $2 dividend since you now own the stock.

Since the $2 loss from the stock price is offset by the $2 dividend received, you are better off exercising the option than holding it. That is not because of any additional profit, but because you avoid a two-point loss. You must exercise the option early to break even.

What about the third choice, selling the option, and buying stock? This seems very similar to early exercise since, in both cases, you are replacing the option with the stock. Your decision will depend on the price of the option. In this example, we said the option is trading at parity (10), so there would be no difference between exercising the option early or selling the option and buying the stock.

But options rarely trade exactly at parity. Suppose your 90 call option is trading for more than parity, say $11. If you sell the option and purchase the stock, you still receive the $2 dividend and own a stock worth $98, but you end up with an additional $1 you would not have collected had you exercised the call.

Alternatively, if the option is trading below parity, say $9, you want to exercise the option early. This ensures that you lock in 10 points (opposed to just 9 had you sold the call), plus the $2 dividend. The only time it makes sense to exercise a call option early is if the option is trading at or below parity, and the stock goes ex-dividend the next day.

The Bottom Line

Although interest rates and dividends are not the primary factors affecting an option’s price, the options trader should still be aware of their effects. In fact, the primary drawback in many of the option analysis tools available is they use a simple Black Scholes model and ignore interest rates and dividends. The impact of not adjusting for early exercise can be great since it can cause an option to seem undervalued by as much as 15%.

Remember, when you are competing in the options market against other investors and professional market makers, it makes sense to use the most accurate tools available.

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