Compound Options: Options on Options & the Geske Formula
Compound options are among the most sophisticated derivatives in finance. Whether you’re analyzing corporate capital structures, valuing staged R&D investments, or preparing for advanced finance exams, understanding compound options is essential. This guide covers the four types of compound options, the Geske pricing formula, real-world applications, and the key distinctions from standard options.
What Are Compound Options?
A compound option is an option on an option — a derivative whose underlying asset is itself another option rather than a stock, bond, or commodity. When you buy a compound option, you’re paying a premium today for the right (but not obligation) to acquire or sell another option at a future date.
Compound options involve two strikes and two expiry dates. The compound option expires at time T1 with strike K1. If exercised, it delivers an underlying option that expires at time T2 with strike K2, where T1 < T2.
This two-stage structure creates sequential exercise decisions. At T1, you decide whether the underlying option is worth more than K1. If so, you exercise and receive the underlying option. At T2, you then decide whether to exercise that underlying option based on the asset price versus K2.
Compound options are classified as “second-order” options in academic literature. Unlike truly path-dependent options such as Asian options (which depend on average prices) or barrier options (which require continuous monitoring), compound options depend only on the underlying asset price at two specific dates — T1 and T2. This multi-stage structure is what gives rise to the bivariate normal distribution in pricing.
Types of Compound Options
There are exactly four types of compound options, defined by whether the compound option itself is a call or put, and whether the underlying option is a call or put:
| Type | Abbreviation | Right at T1 | Payoff at T1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Call on a Call | CoC | Buy a call option | max(C(S, K2, T2) – K1, 0) |
| Call on a Put | CoP | Buy a put option | max(P(S, K2, T2) – K1, 0) |
| Put on a Call | PoC | Sell a call option | max(K1 – C(S, K2, T2), 0) |
| Put on a Put | PoP | Sell a put option | max(K1 – P(S, K2, T2), 0) |
Where C(S, K2, T2) is the value of the underlying call option at time T1, and P(S, K2, T2) is the value of the underlying put option at T1.
A multinational corporation expects to bid on a European contract in 3 months. If they win, they’ll need to hedge EUR/USD exposure for 12 months. They purchase a call on a call:
- T1 = 3 months: Contract decision date. If they win, they exercise the compound option to acquire a EUR/USD call.
- T2 = 15 months: The acquired call expires, allowing them to buy EUR at the locked rate.
- K1 = $0.02: Premium to acquire the underlying call
- K2 = 1.10: Strike price on the EUR/USD call
If they lose the bid, the compound option expires worthless — they paid only the small compound premium rather than the full hedge cost.
Compound options also satisfy their own put-call parity relationship. For European compound options with the same strikes and expiries:
The Geske Formula for Compound Option Pricing
Robert Geske developed the analytical pricing framework for compound options in 1979, extending the Black-Scholes model to handle the two-stage exercise structure.
The Geske formula assumes: (1) European exercise on both the compound and underlying options, (2) T1 < T2, (3) constant volatility σ and risk-free rate r, (4) Black-Scholes dynamics for the underlying asset, and (5) no dividends (or continuous dividend yield q if adjusted).
The pricing approach involves a two-step procedure:
- Price the underlying option: At time T1, calculate V(S, T1) — the theoretical value of the underlying option using standard Black-Scholes.
- Price the compound option: The compound option’s payoff at T1 is max(V(S, T1) – K1, 0) for a call on an option, or max(K1 – V(S, T1), 0) for a put on an option.
The key insight is that the compound option’s value depends on the probability distribution of the underlying option’s value at T1, which itself depends on the stock price distribution at both T1 and T2. This creates correlation between the two normal distributions, requiring a bivariate normal CDF rather than the univariate normal used in standard Black-Scholes.
The correlation coefficient in the bivariate normal is ρ = √((T1 – t) / (T2 – t)), where t is the current time. At t = 0, this simplifies to √(T1/T2). The closer T1 is to T2, the higher the correlation between outcomes.
The Critical Stock Price S*
A central concept in compound option pricing is the critical stock price S* — the stock price at T1 where the holder is indifferent between exercising and not exercising the compound option.
For a call on a call: if S > S* at T1, the underlying call is worth more than K1, so you exercise. If S < S*, the compound option expires worthless. The value S* must be solved numerically — there is no closed-form expression for it, which is why compound option calculators require root-finding algorithms.
Compound Option Pricing Example
Consider a call on a call for a foreign exchange option:
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Current spot rate (S) | $1.10/EUR |
| Compound strike (K1) | $0.03 |
| Underlying call strike (K2) | $1.12/EUR |
| Compound expiry (T1) | 3 months (0.25 years) |
| Underlying call expiry (T2) | 9 months (0.75 years) |
| Volatility (σ) | 12% |
| Risk-free rate (r) | 5% |
Step 1: Find the critical exchange rate S* where the underlying call value equals K1 = $0.03. Using numerical methods, S* ≈ $1.08.
Step 2: At expiry T1, the compound option pays off if the spot rate exceeds S* = $1.08. If EUR/USD is above $1.08 at T1, the underlying call is worth more than $0.03, so the holder exercises. If EUR/USD is below $1.08 at T1, the compound option expires worthless.
Step 3: Evaluate the bivariate normal probabilities for both exercise conditions being met, weighted by the present value of payoffs at T2.
The final compound option price incorporates both the probability of reaching S* at T1 and the conditional expected value of the underlying call if S > S*.
Note that the analytical formula produces a semi-closed-form solution — it has an explicit mathematical expression involving the bivariate normal CDF, but computing S* requires a numerical root-finding step. This is why simple closed-form calculators typically don’t exist for compound options.
Compound Options vs Standard Options
Understanding how compound options differ from standard (vanilla) options is essential for proper application and pricing:
Compound Options
- Underlying asset is another option
- Two exercise dates (T1 and T2)
- Two strike prices (K1 and K2)
- Exercise at T1 depends on option value, not asset price
- Requires bivariate normal distribution for pricing
- Higher sensitivity to volatility model assumptions
- Primarily traded OTC (over-the-counter)
Standard Options
- Underlying asset is a stock, index, or commodity
- One exercise date (T)
- One strike price (K)
- Exercise depends directly on asset price
- Requires univariate normal distribution for pricing
- More robust to model assumptions
- Traded on exchanges with standardized contracts
The key practical difference is the exercise trigger: for compound options, you’re comparing the underlying option’s value to K1, not the stock price to a strike. This makes compound options valuable when optionality itself is uncertain — you only “activate” the full hedge or speculative position if a precondition is met.
Applications: Corporate Securities and Staged Investments
Compound options have powerful applications in both corporate finance theory and practical investment structuring.
Corporate Liabilities as Compound Options
In the Merton (1974) framework, equity in a leveraged firm is modeled as a call option on the firm’s assets — shareholders have the right to “call away” the assets from debtholders by repaying the debt at maturity.
Robert Geske extended this framework to firms with coupon debt or multiple debt maturities. When a firm has intermediate debt payments before final maturity, equity becomes a compound option:
- At each coupon date (T1), shareholders decide whether to make the payment (exercise the compound option) to preserve their equity claim
- If they pay, they retain the option to either repay principal at maturity (T2) or default then
- If they skip the coupon, the firm defaults immediately — the compound option expires worthless
Consider a firm with $100M in assets, $60M in zero-coupon debt due in 5 years, and a $5M coupon payment due in 2 years:
- At year 2 (T1): Shareholders decide whether to pay the $5M coupon. This is the compound option exercise with K1 = $5M.
- At year 5 (T2): If they paid the coupon, shareholders can repay $60M principal and keep any remaining asset value. This is the underlying call with K2 = $60M.
If asset value drops below a critical threshold at year 2, the remaining equity (call on $60M principal) is worth less than $5M — shareholders rationally default on the coupon rather than “throw good money after bad.”
This framework is particularly relevant for analyzing distressed debt, leveraged buyouts, and credit risk in firms with complex capital structures.
Staged Venture Capital and R&D Investments
Compound options naturally model staged investment decisions where each phase creates the option to proceed to the next:
- Venture capital: Series A funding is a call on Series B — investors pay today for the option to invest more if milestones are met
- Pharmaceutical R&D: Phase 1 clinical trials create the option to fund Phase 2, which creates the option to fund Phase 3
- Natural resources: Exploration spending creates the option to develop, which creates the option to extract
For capital budgeting applications of this framework — including NPV analysis and strategic decision-making — see our guide to real options. This article focuses on the derivative mechanics; real options applies these concepts to corporate investment decisions.
Common Mistakes
When working with compound options, practitioners frequently encounter these pitfalls:
1. Confusing Option Value with Asset Price — The compound option’s exercise decision at T1 depends on comparing the underlying option’s value V(S, T1) to K1 — not the stock price S to a strike. Many errors stem from treating compound options like standard options and using the wrong comparison.
2. Mixing Up the Two Strike Prices — Compound options have K1 (the compound strike) and K2 (the underlying option’s strike). These serve completely different purposes: K1 is compared to option value at T1, while K2 is compared to asset price at T2. Swapping them produces nonsensical results.
3. Using Flat Volatility Mechanically — The Geske formula assumes constant volatility, but compound options are highly sensitive to volatility model choice. In practice, traders use stochastic volatility models or implied volatility surfaces calibrated to market data. Blindly applying historical volatility to the constant-σ formula can produce significant pricing errors.
4. Forgetting Two Time Horizons — Compound options involve T1 and T2, and both affect pricing. The time to T1 determines when the compound decision is made; the time from T1 to T2 determines the underlying option’s remaining life. Using single-horizon intuition from standard options leads to incorrect analysis.
Limitations of Compound Options
While powerful, compound options have significant practical limitations:
Compound option values are highly sensitive to the underlying pricing model. Small changes in volatility assumptions, interest rates, or the asset price process can produce large changes in theoretical value. As Wilmott notes, the constant-volatility Geske formula is “dangerous to use in practice” without careful model validation.
Market vs. Model Price Discrepancy: When exercising a compound option, you receive (or deliver) the underlying option itself — not its cash value. If you then want to liquidate that option, you depend on market prices, which may differ from your model’s theoretical value. This is particularly relevant for bespoke OTC structures where the underlying option may have limited liquidity.
Numerical Complexity: Computing the critical stock price S* requires numerical root-finding. The bivariate normal CDF evaluation also requires numerical integration or approximation. This makes compound options computationally more demanding than vanilla options.
Limited Liquidity: Compound options are primarily OTC/bespoke instruments rather than exchange-traded products. This means wider bid-ask spreads, counterparty risk considerations, and less price transparency compared to standard options.
Hedging Complexity: The Greeks for compound options involve “second-order” sensitivities that are harder to manage. Delta hedging a compound option requires hedging the delta of something whose delta itself changes based on the underlying option’s delta.
Compound options are powerful tools for modeling staged decisions and complex payoffs, but they require careful attention to model assumptions, numerical implementation, and the distinction between theoretical and market values.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This article is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Compound option valuations are model-dependent and may differ significantly based on assumptions, volatility models, and market conditions. Always conduct your own research and consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions involving derivatives.