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Books > Money & Finance > General
Interest rate modeling and the pricing of related derivatives remain subjects of increasing importance in financial mathematics and risk management. This book provides an accessible introduction to these topics by a step-by-step presentation of concepts with a focus on explicit calculations. Each chapter is accompanied with exercises and their complete solutions, making the book suitable for advanced undergraduate and graduate level students.This second edition retains the main features of the first edition while incorporating a complete revision of the text as well as additional exercises with their solutions, and a new introductory chapter on credit risk. The stochastic interest rate models considered range from standard short rate to forward rate models, with a treatment of the pricing of related derivatives such as caps and swaptions under forward measures. Some more advanced topics including the BGM model and an approach to its calibration are also covered.
This book considers and assesses essential financial issues by utilizing data science and fuzzy multiple criteria decision making (MCDM) methods. It introduces readers to a range of data science methods, and demonstrates their application in the fields of business, health, economics, finance and engineering. In addition, it provides suggestions based on the assessment results on each topic, which can help to enhance the efficiency of the financial system and the sustainability of economic development. Given its scope, the book will help readers broaden their perspective on the assessment and evaluation of financial issues using data science and MCDM approaches.
This book provides a critical analysis of the evolution of corporate disclosure. Building upon prior academic literature, it assesses the most important changes in mandatory corporate disclosure, the growing relevance of social and environmental disclosure, and revolutionary new forms of corporate communication, in particular social media. It also includes empirical analyses that shed further light on the impact of voluntary communication, i.e. social and environmental reporting and corporate social media communication, on managerial and investment decisions. Lastly, it discusses new directions for accounting and corporate governance research on the theoretical and empirical challenges of corporate disclosure. Offering a wealth of relevant and timely advice, the book will help regulators design policies that allow businesses to overcome current and emerging economic, social, and technological challenges.
This original book is the first serious study investigating the crowdfunding phenomenon, which has developed deep meaning for various stakeholders benefiting from this funding collection mechanism and its innovative new role, especially in the processes of business creation and spread of entrepreneurship. The actors involved -promoters, supporters, and the platforms through which the campaigns are launched - constitute an ecosystem in continuous evolution, which has grown dramatically and allows for its further development. Irini Liakopoulou has conducted with the "multiple paper thesis" method in which original and innovative contributions are presented, applying new techniques and methodologies. The book's goal is to foster debate about crowdfunding, an under-researched topic whose implications are not fully understood but will be a vital part of social and economic life in the future.
This book brings together for the first time more than half a dozen proposals for an imperial paper currency in the mid-eighteenth century British Atlantic, to show how manage colonial currency and banking in the expanding empire. Existing studies have looked at the successes and failures of schemes in individual colonies. But some had grander ambitions, such as Benjamin Franklin, and offered proposals for 'imperial' or 'continental' paper currencies and monetary unions which would help knit together colonial territories throughout North America and even the Caribbean into a cohesive whole during a moment of imperial reform. This book brings together these proposals for the first time, including several never studied before, to show how thinkers and writers on empire, currency and finance drew on financial practices, precedents and principles from across the British Atlantic to present their own visions of monetary union and the future of empire. In doing so it makes an important and original contribution to the wider histories of monetary and financial thought and theory and the roots of American monetary policy, and the links between finance, empire, politics, reform and revolution. It will be of interest to academics working on the history of finance, banking and currency in the British Isles, North America and the Caribbean in the eighteenth century, as well as those working on the political economy of the British Empire, including mercantilism, trade, warfare and the politics of empire in the decades leading up to the American Revolution.
Bill Gates' quote, "Banking is necessary, but banks are not," showcases the opportunity for financial services digital transformation. The next transition from industry 4.0 to 5.0 will impact all sectors, including banking. It will combine information technology and automation, based on artificial intelligence, person-robot collaboration, and sustainability. It is time to analyze this transformation in banking deeply, so that the sector can adequately change to the 'New Normal' and a wholly modified banking model can be properly embedded in the business. This book presents a conceptual model of banking 5.0, detailing its implementation in processes, platforms, people, and partnerships of financial services organizations companies. The last part of the book is then dedicated to future developments. Of interest to academics, researchers, and professionals in banking, financial technology, and financial services, this book also includes business cases in financial services.
Calvet and Fisher present a powerful, new technique for volatility
forecasting that draws on insights from the use of multifractals in
the natural sciences and mathematics and provides a unified
treatment of the use of multifractal techniques in finance. A large
existing literature (e.g., Engle, 1982; Rossi, 1995) models
volatility as an average of past shocks, possibly with a noise
component. This approach often has difficulty capturing sharp
discontinuities and large changes in financial volatility. Their
research has shown the advantages of modelling volatility as
subject to abrupt regime changes of heterogeneous durations. Using
the intuition that some economic phenomena are long-lasting while
others are more transient, they permit regimes to have varying
degrees of persistence. By drawing on insights from the use of
multifractals in the natural sciences and mathematics, they show
how to construct high-dimensional regime-switching models that are
easy to estimate, and substantially outperform some of the best
traditional forecasting models such as GARCH. The goal of their
book is to popularize the approach by presenting these exciting new
developments to a wider audience. They emphasize both theoretical
and empirical applications, beginning with a style that is easily
accessible and intuitive in early chapters, and extending to the
most rigorous continuous-time and equilibrium pricing formulations
in final chapters.
"An insightful book from a Wall St. " insider' that shows you how to win consistently at investing, navigate uncertain markets, and stay at least one step ahead of the crowd. Sprinkled with anecdotes, written with a wry sense of humor, it's an easy and valuable read for anyone looking to see what "smart money" should be doing today." Ernest Chu, Member of the NYSE Chairman, Green States Energy Best selling author, Soul Currency "This book is for every individual investor who feels like Wall Street left them behind because they didn't have a big enough account to attract sound advice." Col. Patrick Graf, Former Director NATO Partnership Program Director of Export Compliance L III Communications " This book takes the mystery out of making money" Daniel Lothian, White House Correspondent CNN Tired of investing your money like the masses....? Only to lose money..? Well, here is an approach that you can use to invest with the people in the know...corporate insiders, billionaires, politicians, and the world's most successful money managers. You don't need a degree in finance or a specialized Wall Street background to understand the insights and investing strategies in this guidebook. But you do need a willingness to learn who controls the markets; what causes bubbles to burst; why all insiders aren't equal; where to find where the insiders invest. The insight and information you'll learn will not only change the way you invest, but also change how you understand, relate to, and look at the world. Invest like the insiders and improve your returns with the guidance in Smart Money.
This book covers the project financing process from the perspective of a wider and more general group of stakeholders by addressing the three key elements of cash flow; collateral/support structures; and risk management. Following a detailed description of project financing in the first chapter, the authors discuss the project financing process, modelling and risk management, public private partnerships and project financing in practice including the use of the principles in a range of different contexts. A sound understanding of project management is fundamental to successful project financing, as is the need to have a clear plan for a project to communicate the essential information that different stakeholders require.A successful project financing starts with the different phases of a project and descriptions of the key risk areas include the challenges in estimating the cost of a project and the general principles of financial modelling with a discussion of the unique aspects of financial modelling for different industries. Throughout the book, short recent international case studies are used to illustrate successful and unsuccessful projects allowing the lessons learned to be visible and there are many examples of specific applications of project finance techniques throughout the text.Bundle Set: Project Financing (Analyzing and Structuring Projects & Financial Instruments and Risk Management)
A first-hand look at the extraordinary collapse of FTX, Alameda Research, and Sam Bankman-Fried In SBF: How the FTX Bankruptcy Unwound Crypto’s Very Bad Good Guy, accomplished crypto reporter Brady Dale presents an engrossing take on the spectacular and sudden implosion of FTX, Alameda Research, and their associated companies, as well as the criminal indictments of Sam Bankman-Fried and several of his associates. In the book, you’ll go beyond the salacious details and tawdry gossip to grasp the real lessons to be learned from one of the most dramatic corporate failures in living memory. The author explores: The often-confusing world of cryptocurrency and decentralized finance, offering a deep understanding of both industries The history of Sam Bankman-Fried, what smart money players had to say about him in 2019 and 2020, and why many decentralized finance professionals considered him a “pirate” even before FTX and Alameda blew up What the aggressive lobbying campaigns waged by FTX and Sam Bankman-Fried reveal about the latter’s motives and goals An extraordinary account of almost unimaginable wealth, greed, and hubris, SBF is a can’t-miss account of a fascinating corporate tragedy that continues to unfold to this very day.
This book offers a comparative perspective on 18 countries' legal regulation of crowdfunding. In the wake of the financial crises of 2008, use of this alternative financing method has increased substantially, in various forms. Whereas some states have adopted tailor-made regimes in order to regulate but also encourage this way of financing projects, allowing loans to be made by non-banking institutions, others still haven't specifically addressed the subject. An analysis of these diverse legislative stances offers readers a range of legal solutions for managing crowdfunding activities with regard to e.g. protecting investors, imposing limits on project owners, and finally the role and duties of intermediaries, i.e., companies operating crowdfunding platforms. In addition, the content presented here provides a legal basis for states and supranational organizations interested in regulating this phenomenon to achieve more legal certainty.
This research review assesses the ground-breaking contributions to the evolution of knowledge in the economics of risk and time, from its early twentieth-century explorations to its current diversity of approaches. The analysis focuses first on the basic decisions under uncertainty, and then on asset pricing. It further discusses both classical expected utility approach and its non-expected utility generalizations, with applications to dynamic portfolio choices, insurance, risk sharing, and risk prevention. This review will be valuable for scholars in finance and macroeconomics, particularly those with an interest in the modeling foundations of consumer and investor decisions under uncertainty.
This book is an essential tool for understanding the range of IP investment strategies - and how companies unlock value and profit from it. It provides a valuable tutorial for businesspeople, entrepreneurs, analysts, and dealmakers seeking better to understand, with clear examples, the components of different IP categories and their value-creating applications.
Electronic and algorithmic trading has become part of a mainstream
response to buy-side traders' need to move large blocks of shares
with minimum market impact in today's complex institutional trading
environment. This book illustrates an overview of key providers in
the marketplace. With electronic trading platforms becoming
increasingly sophisticated, more cost effective measures handling
larger order flow is becoming a reality. The higher reliance on
electronic trading has had profound implications for vendors and
users of information and trading products. Broker dealers providing
solutions through their products are facing changes in their
business models such as: relationships with sellside customers,
relationships with buyside customers, the importance of broker
neutrality, the role of direct market access, and the relationship
with prime brokers.
The long-awaited sequel to the "Concepts and Practice of Mathematical Finance" has now arrived. Taking up where the first volume left off, a range of topics is covered in depth. Extensive sections include portfolio credit derivatives, quasi-Monte Carlo, the calibration and implementation of the LIBOR market model, the acceleration of binomial trees, the Fourier transform in option pricing and much more. Throughout Mark Joshi brings his unique blend of theory, lucidity, practicality and experience to bear on issues relevant to the working quantitative analyst. "More Mathematical Finance" is Mark Joshi's fourth book. His previous books including "C++ Design Patterns and Derivatives Pricing" and "Quant Job Interview Questions and Answers" have proven to be indispensable for individuals seeking to become quantitative analysts. His new book continues this trend with a clear exposition of a range of models and techniques in the field of derivatives pricing. Each chapter is accompanied by a set of exercises. These are of a variety of types including simple proofs, complicated derivations and computer projects. Chapter 1. Optionality, convexity and volatility 1 Chapter 2. Where does the money go? 9 Chapter 3. The Bachelier model 23 Chapter 4. Deriving the Delta 29 Chapter 5. Volatility derivatives and model-free dynamic replication 33 Chapter 6. Credit derivatives 41 Chapter 7. The Monte Carlo pricing of portfolio credit derivatives 53 Chapter 8. Quasi-analytic methods for pricing portfolio credit derivatives 71 Chapter 9. Implied correlation for portfolio credit derivatives 81 Chapter 10. Alternate models for portfolio credit derivatives 93 Chapter 11. The non-commutativity of discretization 113 Chapter 12. What is a factor? 129 Chapter 13. Early exercise and Monte Carlo Simulation 151 Chapter 14. The Brownian bridge 175 Chapter 15. Quasi Monte Carlo Simulation 185 Chapter 16. Pricing continuous barrier options using a jump-diffusion model 207 Chapter 17. The Fourier-Laplace transform and option pricing 219 Chapter 18. The cos method 253 Chapter 19. What are market models? 265 Chapter 20. Discounting in market models 281 Chapter 21. Drifts again 293 Chapter 22. Adjoint and automatic Greeks 307 Chapter 23. Estimating correlation for the LIBOR market model 327 Chapter 24. Swap-rate market models 341 Chapter 25. Calibrating market models 363 Chapter 26. Cross-currency market models 389 Chapter 27. Mixture models 401 Chapter 28. The convergence of binomial trees 407 Chapter 29. Asymmetry in option pricing 433 Chapter 30. A perfect model? 443 Chapter 31. The fundamental theorem of asset pricing. 449 Appendix A. The discrete Fourier transform 457 Praise for the Concepts and Practice of Mathematical Finance: "overshadows many other books available on the same subject" -- ZentralBlatt Math "Mark Joshi succeeds admirably - an excellent starting point for a numerate person in the field of mathematical finance." -- Risk Magazine "Very few books provide a balance between financial theory and practice. This book is one of the few books that strikes that balance." -- SIAM Review |
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