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Basic Question 4 of 14
The downside effect of volatility hurts:
II. puts.
B. II only
C. both I and II
D. neither
I. calls.
II. puts.
A. I only
B. II only
C. both I and II
D. neither
User Contributed Comments 5
User | Comment |
---|---|
antarctica | should be more specific in the answer: the volatility of stock price in the downside range does not affect either puts or calls. |
bobert | No, it does affect puts. There are more possible downside values which are profitable for owning a put. The answer is right, it does not hurt either of them. |
fabsan | If downside effect of volatility means less volatility for the underlying, then answer D is the proper answer. Higher volatility for the underlying = higher volatility for the option. |
Inaganti6 | Why doesn't the question state lack of volatility ? |
MariaDunet | Downside affect of volatility means decrease in prices of the underlying not in volatility. Changes in prices=increase in volatility =increase in values of both options. So it doesn’t hurts. |
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Learning Outcome Statements
identify the factors that determine the value of an option and describe how each factor affects the value of an option
CFA® 2024 Level I Curriculum, Volume 5, Module 8.