Portfolio risk forecasting has been and continues to be an active research field for both academics and practitioners. Almost all institutional investment management firms use quantitative models for their portfolio forecasting, and researchers have explored models' econometric foundations, relative
Portfolio Risk Analysis
β Scribed by Gregory Connor; Lisa R. Goldberg; Robert A. Korajczyk
- Publisher
- Princeton University Press
- Year
- 2010
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 378
- Edition
- Course Book
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Portfolio risk forecasting has been and continues to be an active research field for both academics and practitioners. Almost all institutional investment management firms use quantitative models for their portfolio forecasting, and researchers have explored models' econometric foundations, relative performance, and implications for capital market behavior and asset pricing equilibrium. Portfolio Risk Analysis provides an insightful and thorough overview of financial risk modeling, with an emphasis on practical applications, empirical reality, and historical perspective.
Beginning with mean-variance analysis and the capital asset pricing model, the authors give a comprehensive and detailed account of factor models, which are the key to successful risk analysis in every economic climate. Topics range from the relative merits of fundamental, statistical, and macroeconomic models, to GARCH and other time series models, to the properties of the VIX volatility index. The book covers both mainstream and alternative asset classes, and includes in-depth treatments of model integration and evaluation. Credit and liquidity risk and the uncertainty of extreme events are examined in an intuitive and rigorous way. An extensive literature review accompanies each topic. The authors complement basic modeling techniques with references to applications, empirical studies, and advanced mathematical texts.
This book is essential for financial practitioners, researchers, scholars, and students who want to understand the nature of financial markets or work toward improving them.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Key Notation
1. Measures of Risk and Return
2. Unstructured Covariance Matrices
3. Industry and Country Risk
4. Statistical Factor Analysis
5. The Macroeconomy and Portfolio Risk
6. Security Characteristics and Pervasive Risk Factors
7. Measuring and Hedging Foreign Exchange Risk
8. Integrated Risk Models
9. Dynamic Volatilities and Correlations
10. Portfolio Return Distributions
11. Credit Risk
12. Transaction Costs and Liquidity Risk
13. Alternative Asset Classes
14. Performance Measurement
15. Conclusion
References
Index
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