The Physics of Wall Street: a brief History of Predicting the Unpredictable
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Physics Hits the Street
• 115 in finance. He had a Phd, but in an unrelated field. none of this mat- tered. chicago wanted him. chicago wasn’t working on a hunch that Black’s work would become important. the faculty there had some inside information: options were about to become a really big deal — and a formula that allowed investors to price them would prove essential. two major changes to U.S. and international policy were in the works, both centered in chi- cago, that would soon revolutionize the derivatives industry. Having someone like Black on one’s team could only help. the first major change took place on october 14, 1971, just a few weeks after Black arrived in chicago. the Securities and exchange commission (Sec) gave the go-ahead to the chicago Board options exchange (cBoe), the first open, dedicated options market in United States history. options had been around for hundreds of years, and they had been traded in the United States, often in the guise of war- rants, since at least the middle of the nineteenth century. But they had never been traded on an open market before. economists in chicago had been agitating for the Sec to remove barriers to an open options exchange for years, until finally they convinced the chicago Board of trade (cBot) to convene a committee to consider the possibility, in 1969. the head of that committee was James Lorie, a faculty member at the University of chicago business school; later, Lorie and Merton Miller were essential in writing the report on the public impact of an options exchange that would become a major part of the cBot’s pro- posal to the Sec in March 1971. the cBoe and the Black-Scholes paper were greenlit within months of each other; two years later, the cBoe opened for trading, just a month before the Black-Scholes article would appear in print. on the first day of trading, nine hundred options were traded on six- teen underlying stocks. But volume grew at an astonishing rate: well over a million options were traded in 1973 alone, and by october 1974, the exchange began seeing single days in which as many forty thou- sand options were traded, with regular volume above thirty thousand. Within a decade, this number would reach half a million. And com- petition from other exchanges popped up quickly: first the American Stock exchange announced it would begin trading options, followed quickly by the Philadelphia and Pacific stock exchanges. In January 1977, the european options exchange was established in Amsterdam, modeled on the cBoe. options trading was suddenly a big business, and, at least at first, investors were anxious to learn as much as they could about the new instruments. Black, Scholes, and Merton quickly became household names, at least in finance. the second fortuitous policy change, as far as Black’s career was concerned, occurred almost simultaneously with the creation of the cBoe, though its impact on Black was slower. once again, chicago’s influential economists, and especially the famous monetarist Milton friedman, were behind the initiative. In 1968, when nixon was elected president, friedman wrote him a letter urging him to abandon the so- called Bretton Woods system. Bretton Woods, named for the town in new Hampshire where the system was devised in July 1944, was the international monetary agreement put in place at the end of World War II. the Bretton Woods conference led to the creation of the In- ternational Monetary fund (IMf) and the International Bank for re- construction and development (now part of the World Bank). More important for our story was the fact that under the Bretton Woods system, major world currencies were valued at fixed exchange rates, based on the value of the U.S. dollar (and ultimately on gold, because the dollar was freely exchangeable for gold, at least for foreign govern- ments). changes in these exchange rates were infrequent, involving a long diplomatic process. By 1968, however, when friedman wrote to nixon, the Bretton Woods system was beginning to show cracks. the main problem was that there simply wasn’t enough gold in the world to back the explo- sion in postwar international trade. While the United States held most of the world’s gold supply, gold continued to be traded on the open market, where its price could fluctuate. As long as the United States and its allies could keep open-market gold prices in line with the Bret- ton Woods price, there was no problem. But if the price of gold on the open market rose too high, as it naturally would with growing demand and a limited supply, there would be a risk of a run on the dollar (in 116 • t h e p h y s i c s o f wa l l s t r e e t Physics Hits the Street • 117 the sense of a rush to convert dollars to gold), as foreign governments sought to settle their own debts by buying U.S. gold and selling it for a profit on the open market — in which case the system would simply collapse. Such a rush in fact occurred in late 1967, which was the impe- tus for friedman to write his letter. But for a thinker like friedman, the Bretton Woods system was ill conceived from the start: it was hopeless for governments to try to set exchange rates at all. exchange rates, like anything else, should be determined freely in an open market. nixon didn’t listen to friedman at first, but by 1971, with increased spending in vietnam accelerating the accumulation of U.S. debt, he saw the writing on the wall. first West Germany and Japan pulled out of the Bretton Woods agreement and announced their currencies would no longer maintain parity with the dollar. then, rather than wait for the world economy to collapse, nixon administered the coup de grâce to the Bretton Woods system by ending the convertibility of U.S. dollars to gold. over the next years, the fixed exchange rates gave way to floating rates, creating a system whereby the relative prices of currencies were determined on the open market. Meanwhile in chicago, Leo Melamed, the chairman of the chicago Mercantile exchange (cMe), another futures exchange that had spun off from the cBot in the early twentieth century, saw that global fiscal policy was in flux. following a hint from friedman, Melamed launched a new exchange of his own in May 1972, called the Interna- tional Monetary Market (IMM), for trading futures contracts in for- eign currency. As long as the Bretton Woods system was in place, trad- ing currency futures wasn’t very interesting because currency values could change only through a laborious and public process. But once the exchange rate was allowed to float and be determined by open- market trading, futures markets became essential. Most important was that companies, and especially banks, could use currency futures to protect themselves against unexpected changes in currency values. Suppose that a company in the United States contracts with a com- pany in the United Kingdom to send a shipment of cowboy boots in exchange for payment in pounds on delivery. the agreement is made at a particular time, but the payment won’t come in until the cowboy boots hit Britain. And in the meantime, the pound could change in value, so that the U.S. company’s profits (in dollars) would be lower than they were when the contract was made. to protect against such changes, the U.S. company could sell a futures contract for the amount it plans to receive when the shipment arrives, effectively eliminating the risk that the currency might change unexpectedly. What does the IMM have to do with Black and Scholes’s options pricing formula? At first glance nothing — but within a few years, fu- tures trading at the IMM had expanded to include new derivatives based on currencies, including options. Because currency risk is an important part of any international transaction, currency derivatives very rapidly became essential to the international economy. And once again, as at the cBoe, the Black-Scholes model became an integral Download 3.76 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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