Template:M summ Equity Derivatives 2.4: Difference between revisions
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) Created page with "You will forgive us for not getting too excited about the {{eqderivprov|Premium}} terms of Section {{eqderivprov|2.4}}, functional and unadorned as they are." |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
You will forgive us for not getting too excited about the {{eqderivprov|Premium}} terms of Section {{eqderivprov|2.4}}, functional and unadorned as they are. | [[2.4 - Equity Derivatives Provision|You]] will forgive us for not getting too excited about the {{eqderivprov|Premium}} terms of Section {{eqderivprov|2.4}}, functional and unadorned as they are. | ||
The [[option premium]] is effectively the purchase price for an option. Once paid, you have no further ''obligations'' under the {{euaprov|Transaction}}, just the right — confitional on the option being in the money — to be paid on exercise. This can make matters interesting should your [[swap dealer]] decide to play ''[[Um alberne kerle zu spielen]]'' with the [[flawed asset]] provisions in your ISDA — newsflash: it ''won’t'', as long as its risk team retains possession of their deliberative faculties, but that won’t stop the negotiation community obsessing about how to cater for the contingency that they do not. There is a lengthy disquisition about it in the “details” section of our article on Section {{isdaprov|2(a)(iii)}}. |
Latest revision as of 09:43, 17 April 2023
You will forgive us for not getting too excited about the Premium terms of Section 2.4, functional and unadorned as they are.
The option premium is effectively the purchase price for an option. Once paid, you have no further obligations under the Transaction, just the right — confitional on the option being in the money — to be paid on exercise. This can make matters interesting should your swap dealer decide to play Um alberne kerle zu spielen with the flawed asset provisions in your ISDA — newsflash: it won’t, as long as its risk team retains possession of their deliberative faculties, but that won’t stop the negotiation community obsessing about how to cater for the contingency that they do not. There is a lengthy disquisition about it in the “details” section of our article on Section 2(a)(iii).