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Technically, the value of the option’s delta is the first derivative of the value of option with respect to the underlying security’s price. | Technically, the value of the option’s delta is the first derivative of the value of option with respect to the underlying security’s price. | ||
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Revision as of 16:04, 28 September 2016
The option delta of a derivative is the ratio between a change in the price of that derivative and the change in prince of the underlying asset it is a derivative of.
Delta values range from 1.0 to -1.0.
- A delta of 1.0 gives an exact correlation with the performance of the underlying. A call option necessarily has positive delta: as the underlying asset increases in price, the call value increases.
- A delta of -1.0 does the exact opposite of what the underlyer is doing. A put option necessarily has a negative delta. As the underlying security increases, the value of put decreases.
- A delta of 0 means the two products are correlated at random. A derivative with a delta of nil has no relationship to your underlying, or basically isn’t a derivative of that underlying.
Technically, the value of the option’s delta is the first derivative of the value of option with respect to the underlying security’s price.
See also
- Greeks - the home of all things Greek on this site. It’s our own little Athens.
- Alpha
- Beta
- Delta
- Nu - a trick for young players — and those with a degree in Classics.
- Omega — the end of days, and the right time for backtesting
- Vega — not really a Greek at all, but a maudlin singer-songwriter
- Enhanced beta
- Leveraged alpha