Mathematical Finance: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)

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Offers an overview of mathematical finance today Discusses developments to mathematical finance in the wake of the 2008 financial crash Introduces arbitrage theory, and how it is key to pricing financial contracts, to credit trading, fund management, and the setting of interest rates Accessible to readers with a basic knowledge of statistics and calculus In recent years the finance industry has mushroomed to become an important part of modern economies, and many science and engineering graduates have joined the industry as quantitative analysts, with mathematical and computational skills that are needed to solve complex problems of asset valuation and risk management. An important parallel story exists of scientific endeavour. Between 1965-1995, insightful ideas in economics about asset valuation were turned into a mathematical 'theory of arbitrage', an enterprise whose first achievement was the famous 1973 Black-Scholes formula, followed by extensive investigations using all the resources of modern analysis and probability. The growth of the finance industry proceeded hand-in-hand with these developments. Now new challenges arise to deal with the fallout from the 2008 financial crisis and to take advantage of new technology, which has revolutionized the practice of trading. This Very Short Introduction introduces readers with no previous background in this area to arbitrage theory and why it works the way it does. Illuminating pricing theory, Mark Davis explains its applications to interest rates, credit trading, fund management and risk management. He concludes with a survey of the most pressing issues in mathematical finance today.

Author(s): Mark H. A. Davis
Series: Very Short Introductions
Edition: 1st
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: 160
Tags: 24 January 2019, 1st edition, VSI

Preface
1: Money, banking, and financial markets
2: Quantifying risks
3: The classical theory of option pricing
4: Interest rates
5: Credit risk
6: Fund management
7: Risk management
8: The banking crisis and its aftermatch
Epilogue
Further reading
Index