Delta
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
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