The notional amount (or notional principal amount or notional value) on a financial instrument is the nominal or face amount that is used to calculate payments made on that instrument. This amount generally does not change and is thus referred to as . Notional amount – Definition from Investor Dictionary – Define meaning of the word Notional amount
In simple terms, the notional principal amount is essentially how much of an asset or bonds a person owns. For example, if a premium bond were bought for £1, then the notional principal amount would be the face value amount of the premium bond that £1 was able to purchase. Hence, the notional principal amount is the quantity of the assets and bonds.
Notional amount = number of options * multiplier * strike price.
The notional value is the value of what is controlled, rather than the value of what is owned. If stock option contracts are being bought, those contracts could potentially give a lot more shares than would be possible to control by buying shares outright.
Let us assume we purchase 1 equity call option with a strike of USD 60. This option allows the holder to buy 100 shares (multiplier 100). In this case, the notional is USD 6'000. This position has the same upside potential as holding USD 6,000 of stock (1 option × 100 multiplier × USD 60), but the options may have been purchased for USD 5 each (for a total of USD 500). By this measure, a leverage of 6,000/500 = 12 x has been achieved.A different measure of leverage would be Delta. Note that if the stock price moves to USD 70, the value of the shares that could be purchased is now USD 7,000 (minus the cost of option and commission differential), but the notional amount is still considered to be USD 6'000, the amount used to purchase 100 shares for USD 60 each.
Note that the ratio of notionals is exactly the strike, and thus if the strike is moved, one of the notionals will change. For instance, if the strike is moved to 100, and the USD fixed at 100, the JPY notional becomes 10,000; the buyer will pay the same number of USD and receive fewer JPY. Alternatively, JPY currency could be held constant at 11,000 and change the USD notional to 110: hence, the buyer will pay more in USD and receive the same number of JPY.
When hedging foreign currency exposure, such as for an American business in USD, an outflow of 11,000 JPY, the foreign currency notional must be fixed.
Levered ETFs, notably inverse exchange-traded funds, have the unusual property that their notional changes every day; they pay the compounded daily return, so it is as if one were re-investing each day's earnings at the new daily price. If an investor has an inverse ETF in an asset that goes down, they will have more money, which can be used to short a cheaper asset, hence one's unit notional goes up. Conversely, if the asset has gone up in value in this situation, the notional will go down, as seen in inverse exchange-traded funds,
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