Quantitative financial economics: stocks, bonds, and foreign exchange
β Scribed by Keith Cuthbertson
- Book ID
- 127455358
- Publisher
- John Wiley
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 4 MB
- Series
- Series in financial economics and quantitative analysis
- Category
- Library
- City
- Chichester, England; New York
- ISBN-13
- 9780471953593
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Quantitative techniques in finance have become vitally important to academics and professionals in the financial markets looking to gain a more profitable edge. Quantitative Financial Economics provides a comprehensive introduction to models of economic behaviour in financial markets, focusing on discrete time series analysis. It covers the most recent theoretical and econometric advances in the field, including:
- Models of noise trader behaviour and short-termism* Rational and intrinsic bubbles* Chaos and time varying risk* Non-stationarity and cointegration* Rational expectations* ARCH and GARCH models
The author demonstrates how competing theoretical models may be tested and provides illustrative empirical results and theories from the stock, bond and foreign exchange markets. With a judicious blend of theory and practice Quantitative Financial Economics progresses from simple to more complex theoretical models and empirical tests, making it accessible to both students and practitioners undertaking research into the behaviour of asset returns and prices.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Understanding the complexity of the financial transmission process across various assets-domestically as well as within and across asset classes-requires the simultaneous modeling of the various transmission channels in a single, comprehensive empirical framework. The paper estimates the financial t
## Abstract Intraday volatility for the Eurodollar, the Euro/dollar foreign exchange rate, and the Eβmini S&P 500 futures contracts traded on a continuous 23βhour schedule on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Globex electronic platform is studied. Volatility transmission in a single market across dif