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Garman-Kohlhagen Formula
Option Premium
Option Greeks
Formula Breakdown
Moneyness Interpretation
| Moneyness | Condition (Call; reversed for Put) | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Deep ITM | F >> K | High intrinsic value, delta near 1 |
| ITM | F > K | Positive intrinsic value |
| ATM | F ≈ K | Maximum time value, delta near 0.5 |
| OTM | F < K | No intrinsic value, all time value |
| Deep OTM | F << K | Low probability of expiring ITM |
Moneyness is evaluated against the forward rate F = Se(rd-rf)T, not the spot rate.
Model Assumptions
- Continuous compounding for both domestic and foreign rates
- Lognormally distributed exchange rates
- European exercise only (no early exercise)
- No transaction costs or bid-ask spreads
- Exchange rate quoted as domestic per unit foreign (e.g., USD/EUR = 1.10)
For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Understanding Currency Option Pricing
What is the Garman-Kohlhagen Model?
The Garman-Kohlhagen model (1983) extends the Black-Scholes framework to price European options on foreign currencies. While BSM uses a single risk-free rate, the GK model incorporates two interest rates — one for each currency — reflecting the fact that holding foreign currency earns the foreign risk-free rate.
Put: P = Ke-rdTN(-d2) - Se-rfTN(-d1)
Where d1 = [ln(S/K) + (rd - rf + σ²/2)T] / (σ√T)
How Does It Differ from Black-Scholes?
Black-Scholes (Equities)
One risk-free rate (r)
Dividend yield (q) is optional. The underlying is a stock that may pay discrete or continuous dividends.
Garman-Kohlhagen (FX)
Two rates: rd (domestic) and rf (foreign)
The foreign rate replaces the dividend yield. Holding foreign currency earns rf continuously.
Interest Rate Parity and FX Options
The forward exchange rate is determined by interest rate parity: F = S × e(rd - rf)T. When domestic rates exceed foreign rates, the forward rate is above spot (domestic currency expected to depreciate). This rate differential is the key driver that distinguishes FX option pricing from equity option pricing.
When to Use This Calculator
Use the Currency Option Calculator when pricing FX options — it accounts for both domestic and foreign interest rates. A standard Black-Scholes calculator with a single risk-free rate would not correctly price currency options because it ignores the foreign interest rate that accrues on the underlying currency position.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and assumes European options with continuously compounded rates. Actual FX option pricing involves additional factors like volatility smiles, market microstructure, and counterparty risk. This tool should not be used for trading decisions.
Course by Ryan O'Connell, CFA, FRM
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