This handbook presents the current state of practice, method and understanding in the field of mathematical finance. Each chapter, written by leading researchers, starts by briefly surveying the existing results for a given topic, then discusses more recent results and, finally, points out open prob
Interest Rate Dynamics, Derivatives Pricing, and Risk Management
β Scribed by Lin Chen (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 157
- Series
- Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems 435
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
There are two types of tenn structure models in the literature: the equilibrium models and the no-arbitrage models. And there are, correspondingly, two types of interest rate derivatives pricing fonnulas based on each type of model of the tenn structure. The no-arbitrage models are characterized by the work of Ho and Lee (1986), Heath, Jarrow, and Morton (1992), Hull and White (1990 and 1993), and Black, Dennan and Toy (1990). Ho and Lee (1986) invent the no-arbitrage approach to the tenn structure modeling in the sense that the model tenn structure can fit the initial (observed) tenn structure of interest rates. There are a number of disadvantages with their model. First, the model describes the whole volatility structure by a sinΒ gle parameter, implying a number of unrealistic features. Furthennore, the model does not incorporate mean reversion. Black-Dennan-Toy (1990) develop a model along tbe lines of Ho and Lee. They eliminate some of the problems of Ho and Lee (1986) but create a new one: for a certain specification of the volatility function, the short rate can be mean-fteeting rather than mean-reverting. Heath, Jarrow and Morton (1992) (HJM) construct a family of continuous models of the term strucΒ ture consistent with the initial tenn structure data.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xii
A Three-Factor Model of the Term Structure of Interest Rates....Pages 1-36
Pricing Interest Rate Derivatives....Pages 37-60
Pricing Exotic Options....Pages 61-70
Fitting to a Given Term Structure....Pages 71-75
A Discrete-Time Version of the Model....Pages 77-94
Estimation of the Model....Pages 95-103
Managing Interest Rate Risk....Pages 105-117
Extensions of the Model....Pages 119-124
Concluding Remarks....Pages 125-126
Back Matter....Pages 127-152
β¦ Subjects
Finance/Investment/Banking; Economics general
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