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Formulae for prices and Greeks for European binary puts in a Black-Scholes world

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See Black Scholes Greeks for notation.

 

Payoff, see MnBSBinaryPutPayoff

 

 

Price (value), see MnBSBinaryPutPrice

 

 

Delta (sensitivity to underlying), see MnBSBinaryPutDelta

 

 

Gamma (sensitivity of delta to underlying), see MnBSBinaryPutGamma

 

 

Speed (sensitivity of gamma to underlying), see MnBSBinaryPutSpeed

 

 

Theta (sensitivity to time), see MnBSBinaryPutTheta

 

 

Charm (sensitivity of delta to time), see MnBSBinaryPutCharm

 

 

Colour (sensitivity of gamma to time), see MnBSBinaryPutColour

 

 

Rho(interest) (sensitivity to interest rate), see MnBSBinaryPutRhoInterest

 

 

Rho(dividend) (sensitivity to dividend yield), see MnBSBinaryPutRhoDividend

 

 

Vega (sensitivity to volatility), see MnBSBinaryPutVega*

 

 

Vanna (sensitivity of delta to volatility), see MnBSBinaryPutVanna*

 

 

Volga (or Vomma) (sensitivity of vega to volatility), see MnBSBinaryPutVolga*

 

 

* Greeks like vega, vanna and Volga/vomma that involve partial differentials with respect to  are in some sense ‘invalid’ in the context of Black-Scholes, since in its derivation we assume that  is constant. We might interpret them as applying to a model in which  was slightly variable but otherwise was close to constant for all ,  etc.. Vega, for example, would then measure the sensitivity to changes in the mean level of . For some types of derivatives, e.g. binary puts and calls, it can be difficult to interpret how these particular sensitivities should be understood.

 


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