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Binary option
Binary option
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A binary option is a financial exotic option in which the payoff is either some fixed monetary amount or nothing at all.[1][2] The two main types of binary options are the cash-or-nothing binary option and the asset-or-nothing binary option. The former pays some fixed amount of cash if the option expires in-the-money while the latter pays the value of the underlying security. They are also called all-or-nothing options, digital options (more common in forex/interest rate markets), and fixed return options (FROs) (on the NYSE American).[3]

While binary options may be used in theoretical asset pricing, they are prone to fraud in their applications and hence banned by regulators in many jurisdictions as a form of gambling.[4] Many binary option outlets have been exposed as fraudulent.[5] The U.S. FBI is investigating binary option scams throughout the world, and the Israeli police have tied the industry to criminal syndicates.[6][7][8] The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) has banned retail binary options trading.[9] Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) considers binary options as a "high-risk" and "unpredictable" investment option,[10] and finally also banned binary options sale to retail investors in 2021.[11]

The FBI estimates that the scammers steal US$10 billion annually worldwide.[12] The use of the names of famous and respectable people such as Richard Branson to encourage people to buy fake "investments" is frequent and increasing.[13] Articles published in The Times of Israel newspaper explain the fraud in detail, using the experience of former insiders such as a job-seeker recruited by a fake binary options broker, who was told to "leave [his] conscience at the door".[14][15] Following an investigation by The Times of Israel, Israel's cabinet approved a ban on the sale of binary options in June 2017,[16] and a law banning the products was approved by the Knesset in October 2017.[17][18]

On January 30, 2018, Facebook banned advertisements for binary options trading as well as for cryptocurrencies and initial coin offerings (ICOs).[19][20] Google and Twitter announced similar bans in the following weeks.[21]

Function

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Binary options "are based on a simple 'yes' or 'no' proposition: Will an underlying asset be above a certain price at a certain time?"[22] Traders place wagers as to whether that will or will not happen. If a customer believes the price of an underlying asset will be above a certain price at a set time, the trader buys the binary option, but if he or she believes it will be below that price, they sell the option. In the U.S. exchanges, the price of a binary is always under $100.[22]

Investopedia described the binary options trading process in the U.S. thus:

[A] binary may be trading at $42.50 (bid) and $44.50 (offer) at 1 p.m. If you buy the binary option right then you will pay $44.50, if you decide to sell right then you'll sell at $42.50.

Let's assume you decide to buy at $44.50. If at 1:30 p.m. the price of gold is above $1,250, your option expires and it becomes worth $100. You make a profit of $100 – $44.50 = $55.50 (less fees). This is called being "in the money".

But if the price of gold is below $1,250 at 1:30 p.m., the option expires at $0. Therefore you lose the $44.50 invested. This is called being "out of the money".

The bid and offer fluctuate until the option expires. You can close your position at any time before expiry to lock in a profit or a reduce a loss (compared to letting it expire out of the money).[22]

In the U.S., every binary option settles at $100 or $0, $100 if the bet is correct, 0 if it is not.[22]

In the online binary options industry, where the contracts are sold by a broker to a customer in an OTC manner, a different option pricing model is used. Brokers sell binary options at a fixed price (e.g., $100) and offer some fixed percentage return in case of in-the-money settlement. Some brokers, also offer a sort of out-of-money reward to a losing customer. For example, with a win reward of 80%, out-of-money reward of 5%, and the option price of $100, two scenarios are possible. In-the-money settlement pays back the option price of $100 and the reward of $80. In case of loss, the option price is not returned but the out-of-money reward of $5 is granted to the customer.[23]

On non-regulated platforms, client money is not necessarily kept in a trust account, as required by government financial regulation, and transactions are not monitored by third parties in order to ensure fair play.[24]

Binary options are often considered a form of gambling rather than investment because of their negative cumulative payout (the brokers have an edge over the investor) and because they are advertised as requiring little or no knowledge of the markets. Gordon Pape, writing in Forbes.com in 2010, called binary options websites "gambling sites, pure and simple", and said "this sort of thing can quickly become addictive... no one, no matter how knowledgeable, can consistently predict what a stock or commodity will do within a short time frame".[25]

Pape observed that binary options are poor from a gambling standpoint as well because of the excessive "house edge". One online binary options site paid $71 for each successful $100 trade. "If you lose, you get back $15. Let's say you make 1,000 "trades" and win 545 of them. Your profit is $38,695. But your 455 losses will cost you $38,675. In other words, you must win 54.5% of the time just to break even".[25]

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission warns that "some binary options Internet-based trading platforms may overstate the average return on investment by advertising a higher average return on investment than a customer should expect given the payout structure."[26]

Black–Scholes valuation

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In the Black–Scholes model, the price of the option can be found by the formulas below.[27] In fact, the Black–Scholes formula for the price of a vanilla call option (or put option) can be interpreted by decomposing a call option into an asset-or-nothing call option minus a cash-or-nothing call option, and similarly for a put – the binary options are easier to analyze, and correspond to the two terms in the Black–Scholes formula.

In these, S is the initial stock price, K denotes the strike price, T is the time to maturity, q is the dividend rate, r is the risk-free interest rate and is the volatility. denotes the cumulative distribution function of the normal distribution,

and,

Cash-or-nothing call

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This pays out one unit of cash if the spot is above the strike at maturity. Its value now is given by

Cash-or-nothing put

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This pays out one unit of cash if the spot is below the strike at maturity. Its value now is given by

Asset-or-nothing call

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This pays out one unit of asset if the spot is above the strike at maturity. Its value now is given by

Asset-or-nothing put

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This pays out one unit of asset if the spot is below the strike at maturity. Its value now is given by:

American style

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American binary put with K = 100, r = 0.04, σ = 0.2, T = 1

An American option gives the holder the right to exercise at any point up to and including the expiry time . That is, denoting by the strike price, if (resp. ), the corresponding American binary put (resp. call) is worth exactly one unit. Let

The price of a cash-or-nothing American binary put (resp. call) with strike (resp. ) and time-to-expiry is:

where denotes the error function and denotes the sign function. The above follows immediately from expressions for the Laplace transform of the distribution of the conditional first passage time of Brownian motion to a particular level.[28]

Foreign exchange

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If we denote by S the FOR/DOM exchange rate (i.e., 1 unit of foreign currency is worth S units of domestic currency) we can observe that paying out 1 unit of the domestic currency if the spot at maturity is above or below the strike is exactly like a cash-or nothing call and put respectively. Similarly, paying out 1 unit of the foreign currency if the spot at maturity is above or below the strike is exactly like an asset-or nothing call and put respectively. Hence if we now take , the foreign interest rate, , the domestic interest rate, and the rest as above, we get the following results.

In case of a digital call (this is a call FOR/put DOM) paying out one unit of the domestic currency we get as present value,

In case of a digital put (this is a put FOR/call DOM) paying out one unit of the domestic currency we get as present value,

While in case of a digital call (this is a call FOR/put DOM) paying out one unit of the foreign currency we get as present value,

and in case of a digital put (this is a put FOR/call DOM) paying out one unit of the foreign currency we get as present value,

Skew

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In the standard Black–Scholes model, one can interpret the premium of the binary option in the risk-neutral world as the expected value = probability of being in-the-money * unit, discounted to the present value. The Black–Scholes model relies on symmetry of distribution and ignores the skewness of the distribution of the asset. Market makers adjust for such skewness by, instead of using a single standard deviation for the underlying asset across all strikes, incorporating a variable one where volatility depends on strike price, thus incorporating the volatility skew into account. The skew matters because it affects the binary considerably more than the regular options.

A binary call option is, at long expirations, similar to a tight call spread using two vanilla options. One can model the value of a binary cash-or-nothing option, C, at strike K, as an infinitesimally tight spread, where is a vanilla European call:[1][2]

Thus, the value of a binary call is the negative of the derivative of the price of a vanilla call with respect to strike price:

When one takes volatility skew into account, is a function of :

The first term is equal to the premium of the binary option ignoring skew:

is the Vega of the vanilla call; is sometimes called the "skew slope" or just "skew". Skew is typically negative, so the value of a binary call is higher when taking skew into account.

Relationship to vanilla options' Greeks

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Since a binary call is a mathematical derivative of a vanilla call with respect to strike, the price of a binary call has the same shape as the delta of a vanilla call, and the delta of a binary call has the same shape as the gamma of a vanilla call.

Regulation and fraud

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Many binary option "brokers" have been exposed as fraudulent operations.[29] In those cases, there is no real brokerage; the customer is betting against the broker, who is acting as a bucket shop. Manipulation of price data to cause customers to lose is common. Withdrawals are regularly stalled or refused by such operations; if a client has good reason to expect a payment, the operator will simply stop taking their phone calls.[14] Though binary options sometimes trade on regulated exchange, they are generally unregulated, trading on the Internet, and prone to fraud.[3] Most of the binary options brokers are registered in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and offering their services globally.[citation needed] The country's Financial Services Authority has issued a warning to the general public about unlicensed Forex and binary options trading provided by entities registered in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.[30]

European Union

[edit]

On 23 March 2018, The European Securities and Markets Authority, a European Union financial regulatory institution and European Supervisory Authority located in Paris, agreed to new temporary rules prohibiting the marketing, distribution or sale of binary options to retail clients.[9]

Australia

[edit]

The Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) warned Australian investors on 13 February 2015 against Opteck, an unlicensed binary option provider.[31] The ASIC later began a focused effort to control unlicensed derivative providers, including "review" websites, broker affiliates, and managed service providers related to binary option products.[32] ASIC finally released a ban on sale of binary options to retail clients in 2021.[11]

Belgium

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In August 2016, Belgium's Financial Services and Markets Authority banned binary options schemes, based on concerns about widespread fraud.[33]

Canada

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No firms are registered in Canada to offer or sell binary options, so no binary options trading is currently allowed. Provincial regulators have proposed a complete ban on all binary options trading include a ban on online advertising for binary options trading sites.[34] A complete ban on binary options trading for options having an expiration less than 30 days was announced on September 28, 2017.[35]

Cyprus

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On May 3, 2012, the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) announced a policy change regarding the classification of binary options as financial instruments. The effect is that binary options platforms operating in Cyprus, where many of the platforms are now based, would have to be CySEC regulated within six months of the date of the announcement. CySEC was the first EU MiFID-member regulator to treat binary options as financial instruments.[36]

In 2013, CySEC prevailed over the disreputable binary options brokers and communicated intensively with traders in order to prevent the risks of using unregulated financial services. On September 19, 2013, CySEC sent out a press release warning investors against binary options broker TraderXP, who was not and had never been licensed by CySEC.[37] On October 18, 2013, CySEC released an investor warning about binary options broker NRGbinary and its parent company NRG Capital (CY) Ltd., stating that NRGbinary was not and had never been licensed by CySEC.[38]

CySEC also temporarily suspended the license of the Cedar Finance on December 19, 2013, because the potential violations referenced appeared to seriously endanger the interests of the company's customers and the proper functioning of capital markets, as described in the official issued press release. CySEC also issued a warning against binary option broker PlanetOption at the end of the year and another warning against binary option broker LBinary on January 10, 2014, pointing out that it was not regulated by the Commission and the Commission had not received any notification by any of its counterparts in other European countries to the effect of this firm being a regulated provider.

The Cyprus regulator imposed a penalty of €15,000 against ZoomTrader. OptionBravo and ChargeXP were also financially penalized. CySEC also indicated that it had voted to reject the ShortOption license application.[39]

In 2015, CySEC repeatedly fined Banc De Binary for several violations including the solicitation of U.S. clients.[40] In 2016, the regulator fined Banc De Binary Ltd once again for violation of its legislation. The broker has come to a settlement of €350,000.[41]

France

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In August 2016, France's Sapin II bill on transparency was announced by the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF), seeking to outlaw all financial derivatives advertising. The AMF stated that it would ban the advertising of certain highly speculative and risky financial contracts to private individuals by electronic means.[42][43] The document applies specifically to binary options, and to contracts for difference (CFDs), and financial contracts on currencies. The French regulator is determined to cooperate with the legal authorities to have illegal websites blocked.[44] The law also prohibits all forms of sponsorship and partnership that results in direct or indirect advertising of the financial products it covers. This ban was seen by industry watchers as having an impact on sponsored sports such as European football clubs.[45]

The Cyprus-based company 24Option[46] was banned from trading in France by AMF earlier in 2016.[47] They had sponsored a well-known Irish mixed martial artist, Conor McGregor, who in turn promoted the company through social media.[48]

Germany

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German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) has been regularly publishing investor warnings. On November 29, 2018, BaFin announced that it is planning to "prohibit the marketing, distribution and sale of binary options to retail clients at a national level".[49]

Indonesia

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According to the Commodity Futures Trading Regulatory Agency (CoFTRA) in Indonesia, also known as BAPPEBTI, binary options are considered a form of online gambling and is illegal in the country. The move to delegalize binary options stems from concerns that the public may be swayed by misleading advertisements, promotions, and offers to participate in fraudulent practices that operate under the guise of binary options trading.[50] As of 2 February 2022, at least 92 binary options websites, including Binomo, IQ Option, and Olymp Trade, have been classified as unlicensed operators and blocked by the Indonesian government.[51]

Israel

[edit]
Binary options trading

In March 2016 binary options trading within Israel was banned by the Israel Securities Authority, on the grounds that such trading is essentially gambling and not a form of investment management. The ban was extended to overseas clients as well in October 2017.[17][52][4] It was approved by the Knesset in October, despite strong opposition from the binary options industry.[18]

Fraud

In 2016 The Times of Israel ran several articles on binary options fraud. "The wolves of Tel Aviv: Israel's vast, amoral binary options scam exposed" revealed that the industry is a scam.[14] A second article describes in detail how a binary options salesman fleeced clients. "According to one ex-employee of a firm that employs over 1,000 people in a high-rise office building in Tel Aviv, losses are guaranteed because the 'dealing room' at the binary options firm controls the trading platform—like the crooked ownership of a rigged casino manipulating the roulette wheel".[15]

In July 2016 the Israeli binary option firms Vault Options and Global Trader 365 were ordered by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois to pay more than $4.5 million for unlawful off-exchange binary options trading, fraud, and registration violations. The companies were also banned permanently from operating in the United States or selling to U.S. residents.[53]

In November 2016 the Israel Securities Authority carried out a raid on the Ramat Gan offices of binary option broker iTrader. The CEO and six other employees were charged with fraud, providing unlicensed investment advice, and obstruction of justice.[54]

On May 15, 2017, Eliran Saada, the owner of Express Target Marketing, which has operated the binary options companies InsideOption and SecuredOptions, was arrested on suspicion of fraud, false accounting, forgery, extortion, and blackmail. The case involves a Singaporean woman who claims to have lost over $500,000 to the firm.[55][56]

In August 2017 Israeli police superintendent Rafi Biton said that the binary trading industry had "turned into a monster". He told the Israeli Knesset that criminal investigations had begun.[8]

In September 2017, the FBI arrested Lee Elbaz, CEO of binary options trading company Yukom Communications, upon her arrival in the United States. They arrested her for wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.[57] In 2019, Lee Elbaz was found guilty and sentenced to 22 years in prison.[58]

In February 2019, the FBI arrested Austin Smith, founder of Wealth Recovery International, after his arrival in the United States. Smith was arrested for wire fraud due to his involvement as an employee of Binarybook.com.[59]

Malta

[edit]

In March 2013 the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) announced that binary options regulation would be transferred away from Malta's Lottery and Gaming Authority.[60] On 18 June 2013 MFSA confirmed that in their view binary options fell under the scope of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID), which made Malta the second EU jurisdiction to regulate binary options as a financial instrument. This required providers to obtain a category 3 Investment Services license and conform to MiFID's minimum capital requirements; firms could previously operate from the jurisdiction with a valid Lottery and Gaming Authority license.[61]

New Zealand

[edit]

In April 2017, New Zealand's Financial Markets Authority (FMA) announced that all brokers that offer short-term investment instruments that settle within three days are required to obtain a license from the agency.[62] This is intended to cover binary options as well as contracts for difference (CFDs).

United Kingdom

[edit]
Binary options trading

In the UK, binary options were regulated by the Gambling Commission rather than the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).[63] This regulation, however, applied only to firms that have gambling equipment in the UK.[64] The FCA in 2016 did propose bringing binary options under its jurisdiction and restricting them. They stated that binary options "did not appear to meet a genuine investment need".[65] In March 2017, Action Fraud issued a warning on binary options.[66]

The Isle of Man, a self-governing Crown dependency for which the UK is responsible, has issued licenses to companies offering binary options as "games of skill" licensed and regulated under fixed odds betting by the Isle of Man Gambling Supervision Commission (GSC).[67] This positions binary options as a form of gambling, and the administrator of the trading as something akin to a casino, as opposed to an exchange or brokerage house.

On October 19, 2017, London police raided 20 binary options firms in London.[65] On January 3, 2018, the FCA took over regulation of binary options from the Gambling Commission.[63] In December 2018, FCA has proposed new rules which would permanently ban the sale, marketing and distribution of binary options to retail consumers.[68]

Fraud

Fraud within the market is rife, with many binary options providers using the names of famous and respectable people without their knowledge. According to a national fraud and cybercrime reporting centre Action Fraud, 664 binary options frauds were reported in 2015/16, increasing to 1,474 in 2016/17. The City of London police in May 2017 said that reported losses for the previous financial year were £13 million, increased from £2 million the year before.[13] In the first half of 2017, 697 people reported losses totaling over £18 million.[65]

United States

[edit]
Binary options trading

In the United States, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved exchange-traded binary options in 2008.[69] Trading commenced on the NYSE American (MYSEA) and the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) in May and June 2008.[70]

The MYSEA offers binary options on some exchange-traded funds and a few highly liquid equities such as Citigroup and Google. On the exchange binary options were called "fixed return options" (FROs). To reduce the threat of market manipulation of single stocks, FROs use a "settlement index" defined as a volume-weighted average of trades on the expiration day. MYSEA and Donato A. Montanaro submitted a patent application for exchange-listed binary options using a volume-weighted settlement index in 2005.[71][non-primary source needed] CBOE offers binary options on the S&P 500 (SPX) and the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX).[72] The tickers for these are BSZ[73] and BVZ, respectively.[74]

NADEX, a U.S.-based Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) regulated exchange, launched binary options for a range of Forex, commodities, and stock indices' markets in June 2009,.[75] On March 30, 2010 the CFTC issued an amended Order of Designation to allow trades on NADEX to be intermediated.[76] NADEX have since offered binary options trading between buyers and sellers. They do not participate in the trades.[77]

Fraud

On June 6, 2013, the U.S. CFTC and the SEC jointly issued an Investor Alert to warn about fraudulent promotional schemes involving binary options and binary options trading platforms. The two agencies said that they had received numerous complaints of fraud about binary options trading sites, "including refusal to credit customer accounts or reimburse funds to customers; identity theft; and manipulation of software to generate losing trades". Other binary options operations were violating requirements to register with regulators.[26][29]

In June 2013, U.S. regulators charged Israeli-Cypriot company Banc De Binary with illegally selling binary options to U.S. investors.[26][78] In February 2016, the company reached an $11 million settlement with U.S. authorities. Regulators found the company used a "virtual office" in New York's Trump Tower in pursuit of its scheme, evading a ban on off-exchange binary option contracts. The company neither admitted nor denied the allegations.[79] In November 2016, SEC published yet another Investor Alert on binary options websites.[80] In 2016,

In February 2017 The Times of Israel reported that the FBI was conducting an active international investigation of binary option fraud, emphasizing its international nature, saying that the agency was "not limited to the USA". Victims from around the world were asked to contact an FBI field office or the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center. The investigation is not limited to the binary options brokers, but is comprehensive and could include companies that provide services that allow the industry to operate. Credit card issuers will be informed of the fraudulent nature of much of the industry, which could possibly allow victims to receive a chargeback, or refund, of fraudulently obtained money.[6]

On March 13, 2017, the FBI reiterated its warning, declaring that the "perpetrators behind many of the binary options websites, primarily criminals located overseas, are only interested in one thing—taking your money". They also provide a checklist on how to avoid being victimized.[81][7]

There is also a popular binary options recovery services scam, where fraudsters promise to "hunt" down the binary options scammers and retrieve the money from them through legal methods.[82][83] In January 2018, Boston federal prosecutors filed a complaint against Leonel Alexis Valerio Santana and Frank Gregory Cedeno, accusing them of such type of fraud.[84] In August 2018, Santana was sentenced to 63 months in prison, three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay restitution of $105,869 (Cedeno was indicted in March and pleaded not guilty).[85]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A binary option is a financial that provides a fixed monetary payout or nothing at all, contingent solely on whether the price of an underlying asset—such as a , , or —satisfies a predefined condition, typically exceeding or falling below a at a specific expiration time. Introduced publicly on regulated exchanges like the Chicago Board Options Exchange in 2008 after earlier over-the-counter iterations, binary options enable on short-term price movements without owning the asset, with traders betting "yes" or "no" on directional outcomes and facing total loss of the premium if incorrect. Their simplicity attracted retail investors via online brokers in the mid-2000s, but empirical data from regulators reveal that the majority of participants incur losses, often exceeding 70-90% of trades, due to the inherent zero-sum nature and house edges akin to mechanics. Despite theoretical uses in hedging or event prediction, binary options have become notorious for enabling widespread , including manipulated platforms, false deposit claims, and withdrawal denials by unregistered offshore brokers, prompting the FBI to note they comprise up to 25% of fraud complaints in some regions. In response, authorities have imposed severe restrictions: the banned retail binary options across the EU in 2018 citing investor protection failures, while the U.S. limits them to exchange-traded formats on platforms like to mitigate off-exchange scams. These measures underscore the instruments' defining risks—high leverage, brief expiries amplifying volatility exposure, and broker-client payout conflicts—over any marginal efficiency in .

Definition and Mechanics

Core Functioning

A binary option is a in which the payoff to the holder is either a predetermined fixed amount or zero, contingent on whether the price of an underlying asset satisfies a specified condition at the contract's expiration time. The underlying asset may include equities, indices, foreign exchange rates, or commodities, with the condition typically phrased as the asset price being above (for a binary call) or below (for a binary put) a fixed at maturity. The holder pays an upfront premium to enter the , which represents the of the position. At expiration, the contract settles automatically based on the observed outcome: if the condition holds, the holder receives the fixed payout—often expressed as a cash amount equal to 100 units or a multiple thereof, adjusted by any contract multiplier—minus the premium in net terms; otherwise, the payoff is zero, resulting in a of the premium. This binary payoff structure creates a zero-sum dynamic between buyer and seller, where the seller collects the premium if the condition fails and pays the fixed amount if it succeeds. Unlike options, which offer payoffs scaling with the degree of price movement, binary options cap both gains and losses at , with no intrinsic value adjustment post-purchase in fixed-payout formats. Contracts specify a fixed expiration, ranging from as short as 60 seconds in some over-the-counter (OTC) arrangements to daily or longer in exchange-traded variants, after which no further trading or early exercise occurs in European-style binaries. In regulated exchange settings, such as those offered by the North American Derivatives Exchange (Nadex), binary options trade as instruments priced dynamically between 0 and 100, where the market price embeds the implied probability of payout, settling to 100 or 0 at expiration. This pricing mechanism ensures transparency, as opposed to opaque OTC binaries where payouts are quoted as percentages of the stake (e.g., 70-90% return on investment if successful).

Payout Structures

Binary options exhibit a discontinuous, all-or-nothing payout structure, where the payoff at expiration is either a predetermined fixed amount or zero, contingent on whether the price of the underlying asset meets or exceeds a specified strike level (or other condition, such as touching a barrier). This binary outcome contrasts with the continuous payoff profiles of options, limiting potential gains to the fixed payout while exposing the buyer to total loss of the premium paid upfront. The most common payout structures are cash-or-nothing and asset-or-nothing options, which form the foundational variants. In a -or-nothing call, the holder receives a fixed cash amount QQ if the underlying asset price STS_T exceeds the strike KK at expiration (ST>KS_T > K), and zero otherwise; for a cash-or-nothing put, the payout occurs if ST<KS_T < K. The fixed QQ is typically set by the issuer and may represent a multiple of the premium or a quoted return percentage (e.g., 70-90% of the invested amount in retail contexts), reflecting the broker's assessment of probability and risk. An asset-or-nothing call delivers the full value of the underlying asset STS_T (or sometimes a notional quantity thereof) if ST>KS_T > K, with zero payout otherwise; the asset-or-nothing put pays STS_T if ST<KS_T < K. These structures are less prevalent in retail trading but underpin theoretical pricing models, as standard European calls and puts can be decomposed into combinations: a vanilla call equals an asset-or-nothing call minus KK times a cash-or-nothing call (discounted appropriately). Variations in payout structures include rebates or cash-back mechanisms offered by some brokers for out-of-the-money outcomes, returning a portion (e.g., 5-15%) of the premium to mitigate total loss, though these are not inherent to the binary form and depend on platform-specific terms rather than standardized contracts. Such features can alter effective risk-reward but do not change the core binary nature, and regulators like the SEC emphasize the high-risk, fixed-loss profile without endorsing rebates as universal. In practice, payouts are settled in cash even for asset-or-nothing types, with the issuer handling asset valuation.

Historical Development

Origins in Options Markets

Binary options, also referred to as digital or cash-or-nothing options in institutional contexts, originated as a subset of exotic derivatives within the over-the-counter (OTC) options markets that proliferated after the standardization of vanilla options on exchanges in the 1970s. These instruments diverged from traditional call and put options by offering a fixed payout—typically cash or the underlying asset—if a binary condition was satisfied at expiration, such as the asset price surpassing a strike level, rather than a payoff scaled to the extent of intrinsic value. This design catered to institutional needs for capped-risk exposure to threshold events, initially in customized OTC contracts for foreign exchange, interest rates, and equity underlyings, where market participants sought alternatives to the unlimited potential losses of naked vanilla positions. The conceptual and pricing origins of binary options were rooted in the Black-Scholes-Merton framework introduced in 1973, which modeled vanilla European options and extended naturally to exotics via risk-neutral valuation. A cash-or-nothing binary call, for instance, prices as the fixed payout discounted to present value and multiplied by the risk-neutral probability of expiring in-the-money, represented by the cumulative normal distribution N(d2)N(d_2), where d2d_2 incorporates the strike, spot price, volatility, time to maturity, and rates. As OTC derivatives markets expanded in the 1980s amid growing computational capabilities and financial innovation, binaries served as foundational components for structured products, enabling precise hedging of event-driven risks without the linearity of standard options. The term "exotic option," encompassing binaries, gained prominence through academic work in the early 1990s, reflecting their established but non-standard use in professional trading desks. Prior to their exchange listing in 2008—when the American Stock Exchange introduced European cash-or-nothing binaries—OTC binary options were traded bilaterally between banks and sophisticated counterparties, often embedded in larger deals to manage discrete payoff scenarios like barrier breaches or rate thresholds. This early institutional focus underscored their utility in complementing vanilla options, which had been exchange-traded since the Chicago Board Options Exchange's launch in 1973, by providing discontinuous payoffs that simplified certain arbitrage and replication strategies, such as approximating binaries via tight bull spreads of vanilla calls. However, the bespoke nature of OTC binaries limited transparency and standardization until regulatory approvals facilitated broader access.

Emergence in Retail Trading

The emergence of binary options in retail trading coincided with regulatory advancements that transitioned these instruments from over-the-counter (OTC) institutional products to exchange-traded assets accessible to individual investors. In 2007, the Options Clearing Corporation (OCC) submitted a rule change proposal to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to authorize binary cash-or-nothing options on major exchanges, addressing prior limitations on their standardization and transparency. This approval enabled the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) to introduce the first regulated, exchange-traded binary options contracts in June 2008, initially on the with short expirations of one day or less. Shortly thereafter, the American Stock Exchange (AMEX, later NYSE Amex) launched its own binary options products in 2008, expanding retail availability through brokerage accounts and democratizing access to what had been niche OTC derivatives primarily used by professional traders and banks. These listings provided retail participants with fixed-risk, all-or-nothing payouts—typically 100% return on winning trades versus total loss on losers—without the need for margin or complex Greeks calculations inherent in vanilla options. The straightforward mechanics, combined with low entry barriers via online platforms, fueled initial adoption among non-professional traders seeking speculative opportunities on indices, forex, and commodities. By late 2008, binary options had gained mainstream traction in retail markets, with exponential year-on-year growth driven by the simplicity of digital trading interfaces and marketing emphasizing high yields from brief, directional bets. This period marked a boom, as brokers began offering binaries on diverse underlyings with expirations as short as 60 seconds, attracting home-based traders amid broader online trading democratization post-2008 financial crisis. However, the rapid retail influx also highlighted risks, including high loss probabilities (often exceeding 70-80% for typical trades due to broker edges) and the proliferation of unregulated offshore platforms that preceded full exchange integration.

Offshore Expansion and Boom

In response to stringent U.S. regulatory actions, including CFTC customer advisories from 2008 warning against off-exchange binary options offered by unregistered offshore firms, binary options brokers rapidly expanded operations to jurisdictions with laxer oversight. Cyprus, leveraging its EU membership, and Israel became primary hubs starting in the late 2000s, attracting firms seeking to evade U.S. prohibitions on retail over-the-counter trading while targeting global clients. In May 2012, the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) classified binary options under the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID), enabling licensed operations that provided a semblance of legitimacy despite limited investor protections. This offshore shift fueled a trading boom in the early to mid-2010s, with the industry experiencing exponential volume growth post-2012, driven by accessible online platforms and aggressive marketing. Software providers like SpotOption, launched in 2010, powered over 300 white-label brokers, amplifying accessibility for retail traders in Europe, Asia, and beyond. Japan's market alone hit 48.73 billion JPY in trading volume by July 2015, reflecting heightened retail participation amid low entry barriers and promises of high returns. However, CySEC and Israeli regulators later documented systemic issues, including manipulated payouts and misleading advertising by many firms. The expansion's underbelly involved pervasive fraud, with offshore brokers often operating without robust compliance; the FBI estimated global annual losses from binary options scams at $10 billion by 2017. Israel's industry, which proliferated with over 100 platforms at its peak, prompted a marketing ban in 2016 and full prohibition on overseas sales by October 2017 due to rampant deception. Similar concerns led CySEC to impose temporary restrictions in 2018 and permanent retail bans by 2019, curtailing the boom as authorities worldwide, including the EU's ESMA, phased out retail access to mitigate risks of total capital loss.

Types and Variations

European-Style Binaries

European-style binary options are derivative contracts that deliver a fixed monetary payout if a predefined condition on the underlying asset—typically whether its price exceeds (for calls) or falls below (for puts) a strike level—is satisfied precisely at the contract's expiration date, with settlement occurring only then and no option for early exercise. This exercise restriction aligns them with the standard European option framework, distinguishing them from American-style variants where holders may close positions prematurely, though the discontinuous payoff structure of binaries limits the practical value of early termination to liquidity provision rather than intrinsic exercise. Under the Black-Scholes model assumptions of geometric Brownian motion for the underlying, constant volatility, and risk-free interest rates, their valuation yields closed-form solutions without needing numerical methods for early exercise boundaries. The payout for a European binary call is typically a unit amount (e.g., $1 or €1) if ST>KS_T > K at maturity TT, and zero otherwise, while a binary put pays the unit if ST<KS_T < K. This binary structure equates to a cash-or-nothing option, where the expected value under the risk-neutral measure determines the fair price: for the call, C=erTΦ(d2)C = e^{-rT} \Phi(d_2), with d2=ln(S/K)+(rσ2/2)TσTd_2 = \frac{\ln(S/K) + (r - \sigma^2/2)T}{\sigma \sqrt{T}}
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