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Credit Risk: Modeling, Valuation and Hedging / by Tomasz R. Bielecki, Marek Rutkowski
(Springer Finance. ISSN:21950687)

Edition 1st ed. 2004.
Publisher (Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : Imprint: Springer)
Year 2004
Language English
Size XVIII, 501 p : online resource
Authors *Bielecki, Tomasz R author
Rutkowski, Marek author
SpringerLink (Online service)
Subjects LCSH:Finance, Public
LCSH:Social sciences -- Mathematics  All Subject Search
LCSH:Probabilities
FREE:Public Economics
FREE:Mathematics in Business, Economics and Finance
FREE:Probability Theory
Notes 1. Introduction to Credit Risk -- 2. Corporate Debt -- 3. First-Passage-Time Models -- 4. Hazard Function of a Random Time -- 5. Hazard Process of a Random Time -- 6. Martingale Hazard Process -- 7. Case of Several Random Times -- 8. Intensity-Based Valuation of Defaultable Claims -- 9. Conditionally Independent Defaults -- 10. Dependent Defaults -- 11. Markov Chains -- 12. Markovian Models of Credit Migrations -- 13. Heath-Jarrow-Morton Type Models -- 14. Defaultable Market Rates -- 15. Modeling of Market Rates -- References -- Basic Notation
Mathematical finance and financial engineering have been rapidly expanding fields of science over the past three decades. The main reason behind this phenomenon has been the success of sophisticated quantitative methodologies in helping professionals to manage financial risks. The newly developed credit derivatives industry has grown around the need to handle credit risk, which is one of the fundamental factors of financial risk. In recent years, we have witnessed a tremendous acceleration in research efforts aimed at better apprehending, modeling and hedging of this kind of risk. One of the objectives has been to understand links between credit risk and other major sources of uncertainty, such as the market risk or the liquidity risk. The main objective of this monograph is to present a comprehensive survey ofthe past developments in the area of credit risk research, as well as put forth the most recent advancements in this field. An important aspect of this text is that it attempts to bridge the gap between the mathematical theory of credit risk and the financial practice, which serves as the motivation for the mathematical modeling studied in the book. Mahtematical developments are presented in a thorough manner and cover the structural (value-of-the-firm) and the reduced-form (intensity-based) approaches to credit risk modeling, applied both to single and to multiple defaults. In particular, the book offers a detailed study of various arbitrage-free models of defaultable term structures with several rating grades. This book will serve as a valuable reference for financial analysts and traders involved with credit derivatives. Some aspects of the book may also be useful for market practitioners with managing credit-risk sensitives portfolios. Graduate students and researchers in areas such as finance theory, mathematical finance, financial engineering and probability theory will benefit from the book as well. On the technical side, readers are assumed to be familiar with graduate level probability theory, theory of stochastic processes, and elements of stochastic analysis and PDEs; some acquaintance with arbitrage pricing theory is also
HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-04821-4
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Material Type E-Book
Classification LCC:HJ9-9940
DC23:336
ID 4000110643
ISBN 9783662048214

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