FAQ

What is the fundamental difference between a financial option and a real option?

The fundamental difference between a financial option and an actual option lies in the nature of the underlying asset and the origin of the right to exercise.

Key distinctions include:

1. The nature of the underlying asset

  • Financial Option: It relates to a  perfectly identified financial asset, such as a share, a bond, an index or a currency. The asset exists or is standardized in a market.
  • Real Option: It relates to a real (non-financial) asset, i.e. a tangible or intangible asset related to the economic activity of the company. It can be an investment project, a factory, a patent, production capacity, human resources, or technological capital.

2. The origin of the right (the source of the option)

  • Financial Option: The right results from an explicit legal contract purchased on a market. This contract stipulates the nature of the right (buy or sell), the exercise price, the maturity and the underlying asset.
  • Real Option: The right results from an economic situation or a title deed. It is not necessarily a written contract, but a flexibility acquired by the company:
    • A title deed (such as a patent or land) that gives the exclusive right to invest later.
    • A  specific industrial situation (such as a flexible factory capable of changing energy sources or products) that offers the right to adapt production.

3. The cost (The premium)

  • Financial Option: The price to be paid to acquire the right is an  explicit monetary premium (the price of the option on the market).
  • Real Option: The “price” is made up of everything that has been necessary to acquire the flexibility or the right. For example, the extra cost of a flexible machine compared to a standard machine, or the initial R&D expenses to obtain a patent.

In summary

While a financial option is a market instrument that allows you to speculate or hedge on securities, a real option is a managerial way of thinking (“optional mentality”) applied to strategic investments. It considers corporate decisions (to launch R&D, to build a modular factory) as rights to act in the future according to the evolution of uncertainty and the economic, technological and competitive environment.