Down-and-Out Option

Down-and-Out Option

A down-and-out option is a type of exotic option known as a barrier option. A barrier option is a type of option where the payoff and the very existence of the option depend on whether or not the underlying asset reaches a predetermined price. Considered an exotic option, a down-and-out option is one of two types of knock-out barrier options, the other being an up-and-out option. What happens at the barrier price depends on what kind of barrier option it is, either knock-in or knock-out. These options define the payout conditions based on whether the price falls enough from the strike price to reach a designated barrier price.

Down and out options are exotic options based on a strike price and a barrier price.

What Is a Down-and-Out Option?

A down-and-out option is a type of exotic option known as a barrier option. These options define the payout conditions based on whether the price falls enough from the strike price to reach a designated barrier price. What happens at the barrier price depends on what kind of barrier option it is, either knock-in or knock-out.

Image

Image by Sabrina Jiang © Investopedia 2021

Down and out options are exotic options based on a strike price and a barrier price.
The payout is based on the price behavior in relation to a pre-defined barrier price.
It can be a knock-in or knock-out type of option and the payout differs for each type.

Understanding Down-and-Out Options

Considered an exotic option, a down-and-out option is one of two types of knock-out barrier options, the other being an up-and-out option. Both kinds come in the put and call varieties. A barrier option is a type of option where the payoff and the very existence of the option depend on whether or not the underlying asset reaches a predetermined price.

A barrier option can be a knock-out or a knock-in. A knock-out means it expires worthless if the underlying reaches a certain price, limiting profits for the holder and limiting losses for the writer. The barrier option can also be a knock-in. As a knock-in, it has no value until the underlying reaches a certain price.

The critical concept is if the underlying asset reaches the barrier at any time during the option's life, the option is knocked out, or terminated, and will not come back into existence. It does not matter if the underlying moves back to pre-knock-out levels.

For example, a down-and-out option has a strike price of 100 and a knock-out (barrier) price of 80. At the option's inception, the price of the stock was 95, but before the option was exercisable, the price of the stock reached 80. This valuation means the option automatically expires worthless even if the underlying hits 100 before the expiration date.

A down-and-out option can be a call or put. Both get knocked out if the underlying falls to the barrier price. For an up-and-out option, if the underlying rises to the barrier price, then the option ceases to exist. Both calls and puts cease to exist if the underlying rises to its barrier price.

Using Down-and-Out Options

Large institutions or market markers create these options by direct agreement, for the primary reason that valuing them is a complex undertaking. For example, a portfolio manager can use them as a less expensive method to hedge against losses on a long position. The hedge would be less costly than buying vanilla put options. However, it would be imperfect since the buyer would be unprotected if the security price decreased below the barrier price.

Pricing depends on all the typical options metrics with the knock-out feature adding an extra dimension. European style expiration means the exercise may only happen at the expiration date. The alternative would be an American-style option, where the holder may exercise the option at any time on or before expiration.

Related terms:

American Option

An American option is an option contract that allows holders to exercise the option at any time prior to and including its expiration date. read more

Barrier Option

A barrier option is a type of option where the payoff depends on whether the underlying asset reaches or exceeds a predetermined price or barrier. read more

Call Option

A call option is a contract that gives the option buyer the right to buy an underlying asset at a specified price within a specific time period. read more

Down-and-In Option

A down-and-in option is a type of knock-in barrier option that becomes active when the price of the underlying security falls to a specific price level. read more

Double Barrier Option

A double barrier option is a class of option that either comes into existence or ceases to exist if the underlying reaches a high or a low trigger level. read more

European Option

A European option can only be exercised on its maturity date, unlike an American option, resulting in lower premiums. read more

Exotic Option

Exotic options are options contracts that differ from traditional options in their payment structures, expiration dates, and strike prices. read more

Expiration Date (Derivatives)

The expiration date of a derivative is the last day that an options or futures contract is valid. read more

Hedge

A hedge is a type of investment that is intended to reduce the risk of adverse price movements in an asset. read more

Knock-In Option

A knock-in option begins to function as a normal option ("knocks in") only once a certain price level is reached prior to expiration.  read more