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Fixed income securities : valuation, risk, and risk management /

The deep understanding of the forces that affect the valuation, risk and return of fixed income securities and their derivatives has never been so important. As the world of fixed income securities becomes more complex, anybody who studies fixed income securities must be exposed more directly to thi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Veronesi, Pietro
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Hoboken, N.J. : J. Wiley & Sons, ©2010.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo (Requiere registro previo con correo institucional)
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • part I. Basics
  • chapter 1. An Introduction to Fixed Income Markets
  • 1.1. Introduction
  • 1.1.1. The Complexity of Fixed Income Markets
  • 1.1.2. No Arbitrage and the Law of One Price
  • 1.2. The Government Debt Markets
  • 1.2.1. Zero Coupon Bonds
  • 1.2.2. Floating Rate Coupon Bonds
  • 1.2.3. The Municipal Debt Market
  • 1.3. The Money Market
  • 1.3.1. Federal Funds Rate
  • 1.3.2. Eurodollar Rate
  • 1.3.3. LIBOR
  • 1.4. The Repo Market
  • 1.4.1. General Collateral Rate and Special Repos
  • 1.4.2. What if the T-bond Is Not Delivered?
  • 1.5. The Mortgage Backed Securities Market and Asset-Backed Securities Market
  • 1.6. The Derivatives Market
  • 1.6.1. Swaps
  • 1.6.2. Futures and Forwards
  • 1.6.3. Options
  • 1.7. Roadmap of Future Chapters
  • 1.8. Summary
  • chapter 2. Basics of fixed Income Securities
  • 2.1. Discount Factors
  • 2.1.1. Discount Factors across Maturities
  • 2.1.2. Discount Factors over Time
  • 2.2. Interest Rates
  • 2.2.1. Discount Factors, Interest Rates, and Compounding Frequencies
  • 2.2.2. The Relation between Discounts Factors and Interest Rates
  • 2.3. The Term Structure of Interest Rates
  • 2.3.1. The Term Structure of Interest Rates over Time
  • 2.4. Coupon Bonds
  • 2.4.1. From Zero Coupon Bonds to Coupon Bonds
  • 2.4.2. From Coupon Bonds to Zero Coupon Bonds
  • 2.4.3. Expected Return and the Yield to Maturity
  • 2.4.4. Quoting Conventions
  • 2.5. Floating Rate Bonds
  • 2.5.1. The Pricing of Floating Rate Bonds
  • 2.5.2. Complications
  • 2.6. Summary
  • 2.7. Exercises
  • 2.8. Case Study: Orange County Inverse Floaters
  • 2.8.1. Decomposing Inverse Floaters into a Portfolio of Basic Securities
  • 2.8.2. Calculating the Term Structure of Interest Rates from Coupon Bonds
  • 2.8.3. Calculating the Price of the Inverse Floater
  • 2.8.4. Leveraged Inverse Floaters
  • 2.9. Appendix: Extracting the Discount Factors Z(0, T) from Coupon Bonds
  • 2.9.1. Bootstrap Again
  • 2.9.2. Regressions
  • 2.9.3. Curve Fitting
  • 2.9.4. Curve Fitting with Splines
  • chapter 3. Basics of interest Rate Risk Management
  • 3.1. The Variation in Interest Rates
  • 3.1.1. The Savings and Loan Debacle
  • 3.1.2. The Bankruptcy of Orange County
  • 3.2. Duration
  • 3.2.1. Duration of a Zero Coupon Bond
  • 3.2.2. Duration of a Portfolio
  • 3.2.3. Duration of a Coupon Bond
  • 3.2.4. Duration and Average Time of Cash Flow Payments
  • 3.2.5. Properties of Duration
  • 3.2.6. Traditional Definitions of Duration
  • 3.2.7. The Duration of Zero Investment Portfolios: Dollar Duration
  • 3.2.8. Duration and Value-at-Risk
  • 3.2.9. Duration and Expected Shortfall
  • 3.3. Interest Rate Risk Management
  • 3.3.1. Cash Flow Matching and Immunization
  • 3.3.2. Immunization versus Simpler Investment Strategies
  • 3.3.3. Why Does the Immunization Strategy Work?
  • 3.4. Asset-Liability Management
  • 3.5. Summary