Search
Generic filters
Filter by Categories
Accounting
Banking

Derivatives




Arbitrage


A trading tactic in which an asset is bought at a low price on one market and then is immediately sold on a different market for a higher price. Price differences of identical assets arise, sometimes, for very short periods of time. Arbitrageurs immediately spot such inefficiencies and intervene. Eventually, the law of one price comes to hold again, and riskless profit opportunities disappear. For example, if an investor could buy an asset for 50 dollars and sell it simultaneously for 60 dollars, a riskless (arbitrage) profit of 10 dollars would be made.

In finance theory, arbitrage is a “free lunch”, because an arbitrage transaction makes, or is supposed to make, a profit without risk, and the risk/return tradeoff ceases to hold. But a riskless transaction doesn’t necessarily mean an effortless or costless transaction. For example, traders incur transaction costs on purchases and sales of stocks. Moreover, most of the time, traders have to pay some efforts as to craft their homemade arbitrage strategy based on lending or borrowing as the case may require.

In the context of options, arbitrage refers to a trading strategy which is established by buying and selling similar options simultaneously.



ABC
Derivatives have increasingly become very important tools in finance over the last three decades. Many different types of derivatives are now traded actively on ...
Watch on Youtube
Remember to read our privacy policy before submission of your comments or any suggestions. Please keep comments relevant, respectful, and as much concise as possible. By commenting you are required to follow our community guidelines.

Comments


    Leave Your Comment

    Your email address will not be published.*