Quote from Martinghoul:
I am sure it's the good ole Reiner-Rubinstein closed form formula (based on their 1991 paper). You should be able to find it in Haug's "Complete Guide to Option Pricing Formulas" (section 2.8.6 of the 2006 edition).
EDIT: sorry, this is actually the TOS probability of touching I am thinking of. Probability of expiring ITM is simpler and can be found in the same book.
Quote from rmorse:
Can you ask the question in another way? I'm not sure what your asking.
Bob
Quote from eldorado1:
Thanks for all your replies.
I'll explain what I'm trying to figure out: I was scanning for iron condors on the TOS desktop and was not sure if I should trust the percentage figures under "probability of expiring" (which can be a scan criteria as well) or perhaps I should use another formula I thought of: price * beta / sum of points in profit zone (when it equels a smaller number then the higher the probability to profit)
Although beta actually compares risk I think I will stick to TOS's probability of expiring because I see Implied Volatility (which is used for it) is reliable even when using it to compare risk of different securities (e.g iv's GLD>SPY>FXE) and also beta of SLV and NFLX - senseless (as this post? I hope not) while their iv's are looking right even when You put them side to side with other stocks' iv's.