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All-or-Nothing Call Option


A call option (call) in which the payoff is either a fixed amount for an in-the-money option (ITM option) or nothing for an out-of-the-money option (OTM option). An in-the-money call option is a call with a strike price being below the net amount of its underlying’s market price minus the premium, at a given point within its time to maturity (for American options) or at expiration date (for European options).

For example, an investor is contemplating purchasing an all-or-nothing call option on the shares of XYZ company. The exercise or strike price is $100 per share, and the option fixed payoff is $1100. At expiration, if the market share price is $105 (or whatsoever price more than the exercise price), then the option holder will receive a payoff of $1100. In the opposite scenario, if the market share price is $95 (or whatsoever price less than the exercise price), the option holder receives nothing.

The all-or-nothing call option is alternatively known as digital call option or binary call option.



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Derivatives have increasingly become very important tools in finance over the last three decades. Many different types of derivatives are now traded actively on ...
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