Greeks (finance)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In mathematical finance, the Greeks are the quantities representing the market sensitivities of derivatives such as options. Each "Greek" measures a different aspect of the risk in an option position, and corresponds to a parameter on which the value of an instrument or portfolio of financial instruments is dependent. The name is used because the parameters are often denoted by Greek letters.
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[edit] Use of the Greeks
The Greeks are vital tools in risk management. Each Greek (with the exception of theta - see below) represents a specific measure of risk in owning an option, and option portfolios can be adjusted accordingly ("hedged") to achieve a desired exposure; see for example Delta hedging.
As a result, a desirable property of a model of a financial market is that it allows for easy computation of the Greeks. The Greeks in the Black-Scholes model are very easy to calculate and this is one reason for the model's continued popularity in the market.
[edit] The Greeks
- The delta measures the sensitivity to changes in the price of the underlying asset. The Δ of an instrument is the mathematical derivative of the option value V with respect to the underlyer's price,
.
- The gamma measures the rate of change in the delta. The Γ is the second derivative of the value function with respect to the underlying price,
. Gamma is important because it indicates how a portfolio will react to relatively large shifts in price.
- The vega, which is not a Greek letter (ν, nu is used instead), measures sensitivity to volatility. The vega is the derivative of the option value with respect to the volatility of the underlying,
. The term kappa, κ, is sometimes used instead of vega, as is tau, τ, though this is rare.
- The speed measures third order sensitivity to price. The speed is the third derivative of the value function with respect to the underlying price,
.
- The theta measures sensitivity to the passage of time (see Option time value). Θ is the negative of the derivative of the option value with respect to the amount of time to expiry of the option,
.
- The rho measures sensitivity to the applicable interest rate. The ρ is the derivative of the option value with respect to the risk free rate,
.
- Less commonly used:
- The lambda λ is the percentage change in option value per change in the underlying price, or
. It is the logarithmic derivative. - The vega gamma or volga measures second order sensitivity to implied volatility. This is the second derivative of the option value with respect to the volatility of the underlying,
. - The vanna measures cross-sensitivity of the option value with respect to change in the underlying price and the volatility,
, which can also be interpreted as the sensitivity of delta to a unit change in volatility. - The delta decay, or charm, measures the time decay of delta,
. This can be important when hedging a position over a weekend. - The color measures the sensitivity of the charm, or delta decay to the underlying asset price,
. It is the third derivative of the option value, twice to underlying asset price and once to time.
- The lambda λ is the percentage change in option value per change in the underlying price, or
[edit] Black-Scholes
The Greeks under the Black-Scholes model are calculated as follows, where φ (phi) is the standard normal probability density function and Φ is the standard normal cumulative distribution function. Note that the gamma and vega formulas are the same for calls and puts.
For a given: Stock Price
, Strike Price
, Risk-Free Rate
, Annual Dividend Yield
, Time to Maturity,
, and Volatility
...
| Calls | Puts | |
|---|---|---|
| value | ![]() |
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| delta | ![]() |
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| gamma | ![]() |
|
| vega | ![]() |
|
| theta | ![]() |
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| rho | ![]() |
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| volga | ![]() |
|
| vanna | ![]() |
|
| charm | ![]() |
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| color | ![]() |
|
| dual delta | ![]() |
![]() |
| dual gamma | ![]() |
|
where
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Surface Plots of Black-Scholes Greeks: Chris Murray
- Delta: quantnotes.com,
- Volga, Vanna, Speed, Charm, Color: Vanilla Options - Uwe Wystup, Vanilla Options - Uwe Wystup
- Online real-time option prices and Greeks calculator when the underlying is normally distributed, by Razvan Pascalau, Univ. of Alabama











![-e^{-q \tau} \phi(d_1) \frac{d_2}{\sigma} \, = \frac{\nu}{S}\left[1 - \frac{d_1}{\sigma\sqrt{\tau}} \right]\,](../../../../math/0/e/a/0ea34ccccfc7e995d77612bbca6f98df.png)


![-e^{-q \tau} \frac{\phi(d_1)}{2S\tau \sigma \sqrt{\tau}} \left[2q\tau + 1 + \frac{2(r-q) \tau - d_2 \sigma \sqrt{\tau}}{\sigma \sqrt{\tau}}d_1 \right] \,](../../../../math/8/2/7/827c53f463ea86a54e6d05002364e591.png)








