Subprime Crisis, Pricing and Hedging, Cva, Mbs, Ratings, and Liquidity
Buch, Englisch, 768 Seiten, Format (B × H): 189 mm x 259 mm, Gewicht: 1500 g
ISBN: 978-1-57660-358-1
Verlag: Wiley
A timely guide to understanding and implementing credit derivatives
Credit derivatives are here to stay and will continue to play a role in finance in the future. But what will that role be? What issues and challenges should be addressed? And what lessons can be learned from the credit mess?
Credit Risk Frontiers offers answers to these and other questions by presenting the latest research in this field and addressing important issues exposed by the financial crisis. It covers this subject from a real world perspective, tackling issues such as liquidity, poor data, and credit spreads, as well as the latest innovations in portfolio products and hedging and risk management techniques.
- Provides a coherent presentation of recent advances in the theory and practice of credit derivatives
- Takes into account the new products and risk requirements of a post financial crisis world
- Contains information regarding various aspects of the credit derivative market as well as cutting edge research regarding those aspects
If you want to gain a better understanding of how credit derivatives can help your trading or investing endeavors, then Credit Risk Frontiers is a book you need to read.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften Finanzsektor & Finanzdienstleistungen Anlagen & Wertpapiere
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften Finanzsektor & Finanzdienstleistungen Bankwirtschaft
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften Volkswirtschaftslehre Internationale Wirtschaft Internationale Finanzmärkte
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften Finanzsektor & Finanzdienstleistungen Internationale Finanzmärkte
Weitere Infos & Material
Foreword ix
Greg M. Gupton
Introduction 1
Tomasz R. Bielecki, Damiano Brigo, and Frédéric Patras
Part I: Expert Views
Chapter 1 Origins of the Crisis and Suggestions for Further Research 7
Jean-Pierre Lardy
Chapter 2 Quantitative Finance: Friend or Foe? 19
Benjamin Herzog and Julien Turc
Part II: Credit Derivatives: Methods
Chapter 3 An Introduction to Multiname Modeling in Credit Risk 35
Aurélien Alfonsi
Chapter 4 A Simple Dynamic Model for Pricing and Hedging Heterogeneous CDOs 71
Andrei V. Lopatin
Chapter 5 Modeling Heterogeneity of Credit Portfolios: A Top-Down Approach 105
Igor Halperin
Chapter 6 Dynamic Hedging of Synthetic CDO Tranches: Bridging the Gap between Theory and Practice 149
Areski Cousin and Jean-Paul Laurent
Chapter 7 Filtering and Incomplete Information in Credit Risk 185
Rüdiger Frey and Thorsten Schmidt
Chapter 8 Options on Credit Default Swaps and Credit Default Indexes 219
Marek Rutkowski
Part III: Credit Derivatives: Products
Chapter 9 Valuation of Structured Finance Products with Implied Factor Models 283
Jovan Nedeljkovic,Dan Rosen, and David Saunders
Chapter 10 Toward Market-Implied Valuations of Cash-Flow CLO Structures 319
Philippos Papadopoulos
Chapter 11 Analysis of Mortgage-Backed Securities: Before and After the Credit Crisis 345
Harvey J. Stein, Alexander L. Belikoff, Kirill Levin, and Xusheng Tian
Part IV: Counterparty Risk Pricing and Credit Valuation Adjustment
Chapter 12 CVA Computation for Counterparty Risk Assessment in Credit Portfolios 397
Samson Assefa, Tomasz R.Bielecki, StéphaneCrépey, and Monique Jeanblanc
Chapter 13 Structural Counterparty Risk Valuation for Credit Default Swaps 437
ChristophetteBlanchet-Scalliet and Frédéric Patras
Chapter 14 Credit Calibration with Structural Models and Equity Return Swap Valuation under Counterparty Risk 457
Damiano Brigo, Massimo Morini, and Marco Tarenghi
Chapter 15 Counterparty Valuation Adjustments 485
Harvey J. Stein and Kin Pong Lee
Chapter 16 Counterparty Risk Management and Valuation 507
Michael Pykhtin
Part V: Equity to Credit
Chapter 17 Pricing and Hedging with Equity-Credit Models 539
Benjamin Herzog and Julien Turc
Chapter 18 Unified Credit-Equity Modeling 553
Vadim Linetsky and Rafael Mendoza-Arriaga
Part VI: Miscellanea: Liquidity, Ratings, Risk Contributions, and Simulation
Chapter 19 Liquidity Modeling for Credit Default Swaps: An Overview 587
Damiano Brigo, Mirela Predescu, and Agostino Capponi
Chapter 20 Stressing Rating Criteria Allowing for Default Clustering: The CPDO Case 619
Roberto Torresetti and Andrea Pallavicini
Chapter 21 Interacting Path Systems for Credit Risk 649
Pierre Del Moral and Frédéric Patras
Chapter 22 Credit Risk Contributions 675
Dan Rosen and David Saunders
Conclusion 721
Tomasz R. Bielecki, Damiano Brigo, and Frédéric Patras
Further Reading 725
About the Contributors 727
Index 729