In mathematical finance, the Greeks are the quantities representing the market sensitivities of options or other derivatives, with each measuring a different aspect of the risk in an option position, and corresponding to the set of parameters on which the value of an instrument or portfolio of financial instruments is dependent. The name is used because most of the parameters are denoted by Greek letters.
; delta measures sensitivity to price.
; gamma measures second order sensitivity to price.
; vega measures sensitivity to implied volatility.
; theta measures sensitivity to the passage of time (see Option time value).
; rho measures sensitivity to the applicable interest rate.
.The Greeks are vital tools in risk management. With the exception of the theta, each of the above quantities represent a specific measure of risk in owning an option. Thus a desirable property of a model of a financial market is the ability to compute the Greeks. The Greeks in the Black-Scholes model are very easy to calculate and this is one reason for the model's continued popularity in the market.