📄 Extracted Text (430 words)
based option can theoretically offset most of the risk of
his writing position by acquiring Treasury securities of
the designated maturity period on which the underly-
ing yield is based. Offsetting risk in this way may be
difficult to do in practice, however. While it is possible
at any given time to calculate the principal amount of
Treasury securities needed lo assure that the risk of the
option position is offset, such calculations are based
upon complex mathematical relationships. Moreover.
the principal amount of Treasury securities needed to
assure that the risk of an options position is fully offset
will generally not remain constant throughout the life of
the option, but instead will fluctuate as a result of
changes in yields and remaining time to maturity. For a
given percentage change in yield, this fluctuation will
be greater for securities of longer maturity periods than
for securities of shorter maturity periods. Furthermore,
there can be no assurance that an option writer will be
able to sell the Treasury securities that he holds at the
option's expiration at the same average yield that is
used in calculating the exercise settlement value of the
option. Prices, and therefore yields, could differ from
dealer to dealer. Moreover, when dealer quotations are
averaged in obtaining a yield, they may result in a
value which varies from the value that would be ob-
tained by averaging yields representing actual transac-
tions for the same securities during the same time
period.
6. Investors in yield-based debt options run the risk
that reported yields may be in error. The values dis-
seminated by the designated reporting authority of the
Options markets during trading and for exercise settle-
ment purposes will ordinarily be averages or medians
of dealer quotations or prices, and it is possible that
errors could be made in the gathering or averaging of
these values. A person who buys or sells an option at a
premium based on an erroneous reported yield value
is bound by the trade and has no remedy under the
rules of the options markets. Similarly, persons who
exercise options or are assigned exercises based on
erroneous reported yields will ordinarily be required to
make settlement based on the value as initially re-
ported by the reporting authority, even if a corrected
value is subsequently announced. In extraordinary cir-
cumstances (e.g.. where a value as initially reported is
obviously wrong and inconsistent with values previ-
ously reported, and a corrected value is promptly an-
nounced). OCC may direct that exercise settlements
81
CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TOEFEESERMI$08/Y.842
P. 6(e)
CONFIDENTIAL SDNY_GM_00184026
EFTA01353466
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