<div><p>The financial industry has adopted Python at a tremendous rate recently, with some of the largest investment banks and hedge funds using it to build core trading and risk management systems. This hands-on guide helps both developers and quantitative analysts get started with Python, and guid
Python for Finance: Analyze Big Financial Data
โ Scribed by Hilpisch, Yves J
- Publisher
- O'Reilly Media
- Year
- 2015
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 586
- Edition
- First edition
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The financial industry has adopted Python at a tremendous rate recently, with some of the largest investment banks and hedge funds using it to build core trading and risk management systems. This hands-on guide helps both developers and quantitative analysts get started with Python, and guides you through the most important aspects of using Python for quantitative finance.
Using practical examples through the book, author Yves Hilpisch also shows you how to develop a full-fledged framework for Monte Carlo simulation-based derivatives and risk analytics, based on a large, realistic case study. Much of the book uses interactive IPython Notebooks, with topics that include:
- Fundamentals: Python data structures, NumPy array handling, time series analysis with pandas, visualization with matplotlib, high performance I/O operations with PyTables, date/time information handling, and selected best practices
- Financial topics: mathematical techniques with NumPy, SciPy and SymPy such as regression and optimization; stochastics for Monte Carlo simulation, Value-at-Risk, and Credit-Value-at-Risk calculations; statistics for normality tests, mean-variance portfolio optimization, principal component analysis (PCA), and Bayesian regression
- Special topics: performance Python for financial algorithms, such as vectorization and parallelization, integrating Python with Excel, and building financial applications based on Web technologies
โฆ Table of Contents
Content: Preface --
Part I. Python and finance. Why Python for finance?
Infrastructure and tools
Introductory examples --
Part II. Financial analytics and development. Data types and structures
Data visualization
Financial time series
Input/output operations
Performance Python
Mathematical tools
Stochastics
Statistics
Excel integration
Object orientation and graphical user interfaces
Web integration --
Part III. Derivatives analytics library. Valuation framework
Simulation of financial models
Derivatives valuation
Portfolio valuation
Volatility options --
A. Selected best practices --
B. Call option class --
C. Dates and times.
โฆ Subjects
Finance -- Statistical methods -- Data processing.;Financial engineering -- Data processing.;Python (Computer program language);Programming languages (Electronic computers)
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<div><p>The financial industry has adopted Python at a tremendous rate recently, with some of the largest investment banks and hedge funds using it to build core trading and risk management systems. This hands-on guide helps both developers and quantitative analysts get started with Python, and guid
<div><p>The financial industry has adopted Python at a tremendous rate recently, with some of the largest investment banks and hedge funds using it to build core trading and risk management systems. This hands-on guide helps both developers and quantitative analysts get started with Python, and guid
<div><p>The financial industry has adopted Python at a tremendous rate recently, with some of the largest investment banks and hedge funds using it to build core trading and risk management systems. This hands-on guide helps both developers and quantitative analysts get started with Python, and guid
The financial industry has adopted Python at a tremendous rate recently, with some of the largest investment banks and hedge funds using it to build core trading and risk management systems. This hands-on guide helps both developers and quantitative analysts get started with Python, and guides you t
The financial industry has adopted Python at a tremendous rate recently, with some of the largest investment banks and hedge funds using it to build core trading and risk management systems. This hands-on guide helps both developers and quantitative analysts get started with Python, and guides you t