Thursday, June 6, 2013

Market Risk Analysis, Quantitative Methods in Finance 1st edition, Carol Alexander



This is the 'Elements of Style' for Quantitative Finance: compact, style-setting, purposeful, and designed for the new learner. This book shouldn't be necessary: it reviews basic material that is elsewhere covered by bookshelves (library wings?) full of larger texts on the same topics. Instead, what's amazing is that it can replace an entire bookshelf of larger texts; it is that well-crafted.

The *style* is unique and ought to become the standard against which finance texts are judged. Unlike most finance texts, it does not meander. It is written by a teacher for new learners. Clearly, the author has put great care into the choices. Also clearly, the editing is superb. Like Hering Cheng, I have read it cover to cover. Nary a page is wasted. As finance texts goes, I find it simply delicious in elegance and economy of presentation. Served like a fine dish by a master chef who sweated every detail in the kitchen. The recipe may be lasagna (been there, done that) but still...the best lasagna.

The details, for example. Keywords emphasized in italics. Carefully considered hierarchical organization (e.g., I.3.3.2. It takes time to do this right). Language precision; e.g., a footnote that distinguishes analytic from closed-form, discussion on arithmetic/geometric Brownian motion that often stumps new learners but is often ignored in texts.

The book is informed by actual teaching, as it seems to anticipate many new learning hurdles. It is the first finance text I've read where the reader is not led down any big, blind alleys. Finance texts love to occasionally abandon new learners with an abrupt, intimidating formula. Prof. Alexander cares more than that. Important ideas concepts have concrete, actionable, workable examples. From start to finish, the text supports self-study (except, maybe just maybe, the matrices/eigenvalues may ask for a bit of outside help).

Regarding the criticism for using Excel: they are silly. Excel is the only correct choice for the audience. It is the only common denominator. Otherwise, the only way to meet the audience with examples is to show every example in three or four software code version. This is not necessary for an introduction, excel is the economical choice. And, btw, unlike most finance texts, the Excel worksheets are prepared with care; e.g., the regression XLS has embedded screenshots of the necessary add-in menus. Let us celebrate the lost art of attention to detail.

In regard to topics, book contains:

* Basic calculus and linear algebra (some of the building blocks that are so necessary to understanding complex instruments). The book comfortably uses matrices to go beyond two-asset portfolio examples.
* Probability and distributions. A good selection of distributions. But please note, however, the four sampling distributions (normal, student's t, F and chi-square) that are essential in Gujarati (for the FRM candidate) are only briefly listed.
* The best introduction to extreme value theory (EVT) that I've read. I have many texts on EVT, but this is where I would point a new learner.
* Actionable review of maximum likelihood estimation (i.e., accessible examples)
* Linear regression is standard but, to distinguish itself again, the book includes prototypical examples of their application in finance (oh, this is why we do linear regression in finance!)
* Tight intro to numerical methods
* Intro to portfolio theory includes utility theory (refreshingly, with examples)

I can't wait to start Volume II!

I have studied this book cover-to-cover, and I dare to say it is the best book from which to learn or review the math foundations used in quantitative finance (financial econometrics and derivatives pricing). I only have a degree of bachelor of science in computer science, with two years of analysis-lite calculus courses plus a one-semester calculus-based probability class, from the University of Toronto back in 1999, and I was able to understand most of this book. I also have very limited amount of time to study (basically just one half hour each week day on BART ride).

For someone with a similar background and time constraint as mine, Professor Alexander succinctly presents the foundational concepts of differentiation, integration, matrix algebra, multivariate probability, statistical inference, numerical methods, and portfolio theory. I had been searching for and could not find another book that covers so much ground in a single volume. Books like Mathematics for Economists (which I also highly recommend) do cover some of the maths, but do so from the perspectives of economics, not finance. Furthermore, they do not cover probability and statistics.

Contrary to what some other reviewers say, I think the use of Excel in the book is one of its best features. The company where I work uses SAS, S-PLUS, R, Matlab and Gauss, so I do have access to these tools. However, not everyone, especially those who are not working at a financial company, is so fortunate. Even though R is open source, it would add another learning curve on top of what is already a formidable challenge. Excel can be considered as the lowest common denominator, and if an algorithm can be implemented in it, you can bet that it can be ported to any other tool. Professor Alexander's avoidance of VBA is also greatly appreciated, as it would just add another layer of unnecessary complexity.

The only thing I miss from this book is more proofs or pointers to where we can find them. Don't get me wrong, this book is both practical and mathematically rigorous, and contains proofs or derivations for many theorems. However, probably due to the lack of space, a number of theorems are stated but not proved. For example, I would love to see more substantiation on why the t distributions are used for inferences on means and why the F distributions are for variance (section I.3.3.8). The standard I use to measure the clarity and completeness (in terms of proving from first principles) of other math books is Calculus by Professor Michael Spivak and Mathematical Statistics for Economics and Business by Professor Ron Mittelhammer (both of which I highly recommend; I am only half-way through the latter though). Having said that, Professor Alexander's book is probably as complete as anyone can make it with so few pages.

There are a number of gems of distilled insight throughout the book that I have not found elsewhere, such as the difference in notations of price between discrete and continuous times (section I.1.4.1) and the difference between "estimation" and "calibration" of models (p. 201). Professor Alexander's quality of being a great teacher and mentor shines through these examples. I wish I could be her student at the ICMA. In a way, I already am.

In summary, I cannot recommend this book highly enough for anyone who is starting to venture into the world of quantitative finance. I have already bought the rest of the volumes (save for volume IV, which is still unpublished) in the series, and I truly look forward to learning from them.

Congratulations, Professor Alexander, for writing this outstanding text.

I'm a Maple and occasional Mathematica programmer. I found this book to be of limited use, in no small part because of its insistence on using Excel as the instruction coding language.

Who is the book meant for? People in finance who are quants and who have to code surely would want some language that permits intensive use. Sorry but Excel doesn't cut it. Fine for those who use spreadsheets. But the intensive math described in the book seems better suited for another language. Yes you can map 1 language into another (basically it's 1 Turing machine into another). But there's a good reason why different languages co-exist, some are better suited for a given task.

It's confusingly written, with dense manipulations whose purpose is often obscure. The pendantic pedagogy here is very tiresome, after going through several hundred pages of it.

And the book uses Excel to demo the equations?! For serious analysis, providing code examples in Matlab, Mathematica or Maple would have been more useful.

A better alternative to this text would be if you search for the Frank Fabozzi series. He has authored or edited a bunch of financial texts that are far easier and more lucid reads.

Product Details :
Hardcover: 320 pages
Publisher: Wiley; Volume I edition (May 27, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0470998008
ISBN-13: 978-0470998007
Product Dimensions: 6.9 x 1 x 9.8 inches

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Energy and Power Risk Management: New Developments in Modeling, Pricing, and Hedging 1st edition, Alexander Eydeland



The authors have written a very detailed, well structured text on the different models and developments in the power and fuel markets. It's a very complex, mathematical analysis of the different techniques being used, and the text may lose a number of readers in the overly rigorous formulations. For those involved in risk management, market modeling, or asset management, the book would be a good secondary or tertiary read after you've established a sound understanding of stochastic models and current hedging and pricing techniques in the marketplace. For the layman in the industry, the book will be far too heavy and not worth the read.

The management of risk in the context of energy or weather is quite different than in other contexts, due to the peculiarities of the data that occurs in energy prices. The high volatility of energy prices can range, as the authors of this book point out, between 50-100% for gas, to 100-500% for electricity. No doubt this kind of volatility, and other properties such as correlations and mean reversion, entails that some different mathematical strategies for modeling energy derivatives be devised. The authors give a good tour of some of these strategies, and anyone interested in energy derivatives will gain a lot of insight into their modeling when reading this book. Due to space constraints, only chapters 5 and 7, which this reviewer considered the most important of the book, will be reviewed here.

In chapter 5 the author presents techniques for energy modeling that go beyond the used of the convenience yield by using forward pricing techniques. The goal is to describe the dynamics of future contract prices that takes into account the correlations with other futures, and not on the price evolution of a single contract. Thus it is the `forward curve' that is relevant for obtaining a useable model for derivative cash flow. The HJM model is presented as one of these, with changes in the forward curve over a particular time interval represented as a linear combination of random perturbations. For energy markets, each perturbation is specified by a deterministic shape function multiplied by a Gaussian factor. The unobservability of the factors determining the forward curve evolution makes the use of historical data mandatory if the parameters are to be estimated. But lack of sufficient historical data and its nonstationarity complicate this estimation. The authors discuss the Schwartz-Smith multi-factor model as an example of a forward curve dynamics model and give some solutions. They then move on to a model that specifies the dynamics for only the contracts that are actually traded, which in the literature are called `market models.' The model they actually discuss is a multivariate geometric Brownian motion representation of the forward curve dynamics, where the volatility and drift functions are linear functions of the forward prices. The authors then derive the `discrete string models', where it is assumed that the number of factors is equal to the number of contracts, and the random factors are governed by ordinary Brownian motion. String models are represented as having the advantage of being able to directly observe the factors in the historical data. The authors apply string models to multi-commodity cases, and discuss an example for monthly forward prices. They show how to match the current forward curve, the option prices, and the correlation structure for this model.

The discussion in chapter 7 revolves around finding better models for the dynamics of power prices that capture the special properties of energy prices, such as mean reversion and seasonality, and the need for stable models. They therefore introduce `hybrid models', which they claim give a more natural representation of the dynamics of power prices, make use of nonprice forward-looking information, and can take the historical data on power prices and then extend it to information on fuel prices, outages, etc. The construction of these models is based on the use of nonlinear transformations on a collection of random variables. The random variables are essentially the system demand, natural gas and oil price, outages, emission prices, and weather at a particular time. The power price then can be written as a function of the dynamics of these factors, the latter written by the authors in terms of the corresponding tradables. Recognizing that hedging cannot be done on some of these factors, they adjust the power price formula so that the power tradables, i.e. the forwards and option prices, are exactly matched. This matching transformation is chosen so that if the forward contracts and options are priced using the adjusted formula, one recovers the exact current prices. The model, as the authors summarize it, is an attempt to explain the behavior of the tradables in terms of the evolution of the underlying factors and static adjustments to the terminal probability distribution. Historical information on the tradables and spot products is not used to calibrate the model, but it is used to validate the model. The authors distinguish between `reduced-form' hybrid models, where the transformation is calibrated from the historical prices, and `fundamental' hybrid models, where the transformation is calibrated from the market structure and is only tested on the historical prices. The authors discuss an example of a reduced-form hybrid model that is heavily parametrized, but has the advantage of using price data more efficiently. The rest of the chapter concentrates on fundamental hybrid models, with the author first discussing how power prices are formed in competitive markets. They consider a typical pool market, with the price determined via auction mechanisms. The authors then try to identify and characterize the underlying random variables that actually affect power prices. The time series for the price of power is written in terms of the demand using a `bid stack' function. The bid stack function is approximated by a `generation stack' that is found for a given time by sorting generation units by their generation costs. This approximation is checked by comparing the marginal generation costs generated by the generation stack with the distribution of power prices determined by the time series via the bid stack. There should be agreement in both approaches between the higher order moments. This comparison forms the basis of the authors' hybrid approach to modeling power prices. A transformation is found which relates the marginal generation costs to the distribution of power prices with the requirement that the prices of market instruments used for calibration are matched, and the higher moments are (approximately) preserved. The transformation is not unique, and in fact a family of transformations induced by the multiplication and stack scaling operators can be found.

Until now there were a handful of papers, precious few books, and mostly inside proprietary models and experience that dealt with the complex subject of power trading and all its flavors. This book provides a nice summary of many of the present issues. The treatment of the subject is somewhat mathematically rigorous, so the book might not be for traders as much as it is for quants or risk managers.

To me, the greatest strength of the book lies in its fairly detailed analysis of what DOESN'T work, i.e. why common models and methods from the financial and other commodity realms can not be successfully grafted onto the energy market without risking significant valuation and cash flow prediction errors. The hybrid model they formulate towards the end of the book is very similar to Skantze and Ilic (2001). The departure from most previous models is that they attempt to use the markets to formulate and calibrate the structure instead of relying too much on past historical price/load data, which without some empirical understanding of the underlying processes, is fraught with danger due to rapidly evolving nature of the power market (or at least once rapidly evolving--it seems to be a little static at the moment).

Some familiarity with the market and stochastic/statistical mathematics is assumed. References to specific topics and more in depth analysis of particular subjects are good. The authors have a grip on real-world trading, risk, and cashflow issues, which makes this a useful reference for just about anyone associated with those aspects of the power market. I recommend it.

Product Details :
Hardcover: 504 pages
Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (December 30, 2002)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0471104000
ISBN-13: 978-0471104001
Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1.5 x 9.4 inches

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Stochastic Calculus and Financial Applications, Stochastic Modelling and Applied Probability, 1st edition, J. Michael Steele



MATHEMATICAL REVIEWS "…on the whole, the results are presented carefully and thoroughly, and I expect that readers will find that this combination of a careful development of stochastic calculus with many details and examples is very useful and will enable them to apply the whole theory confidently." SHORT BOOK REVIEWS "This is a world of 'lovely exercises' that are 'very good good for the soul', 'honest martingales', 'bedrock approximations', portfolios that are 'born to lose', 'intuitive but bogus arguments', and 'embarrassingly crude insights'. In short, this is a book on stochastic calculus of a different flavour. Intuition is not sacrificed for rigour nor rigour for intuition.The main results are reinforced with simple special cases, and only when the intuitive foundations are laid does the auhtor resort to the formalism of probability. The coverage is limited to the essentials but nevertheless includes topics that will catch the eye of experts (such as the wavelet construction of Brownian motion). This is one of the most interesting and easiest reads in the discipline; a gem of a book." JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN STOCHASTIC ASSOCIATION "The book is indeed well written, with many insightful comments. I certainly would recommend it to students wishing to learn stochastic calculus and its applications to the Black-Sholes option-pricing theory…I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. The author is to be complimented for his efforts in providing many useful insights behind the various theories. It is a superb introduction to stochastic calculus and Brownian motion…An interesting feature in this book is its coverage of partial differential equations." "It is clear that this is a fairly comprehensive introduction to the tools of (classical) mathematical finance. … the text has much to offer. … In addition, the writing style is refreshingly informal and makes a book about a rather technical subject surprisingly enjoyable to read. In short, despite the recent deluge of textbooks in this area, I know of no better book for self-study." (Christian Kleiber, Statistical Papers, Vol. 46 (2), 2005) "Steele’s book is a sophisticated introduction to stochastic calculus with applications from basic Black-Scholes theory. … I highly recommend the book. His style is wonderful, and concepts really build on one another. … it offers one of the most elegant treatments of the subject that I know of." (www.riskbook.com, May, 2006) "As is clear from the title of this book, it is concerned with applications of stochastic calculus to finance. … one naturally judges the book by three criteria: topic selection, organization, and exposition. In all three domains the book succeeds. The topics selected are rich enough … he or she will benefit from the book. … there are innovations as well … from the pedagogic standpoint." (Philip Protter, SIAM Review, Vol. 43 (4), 2001) "This book offers rich information and a mathematically honest treatment of stochastic calculus and of its use in the theory of finance … . The author gradually builds the reader’s ability to grasp stochastic concepts and techniques … . the author’s presentation of stochastic models in finance and economy is precise and extensive … . Each chapter is accompanied by a collection of rather challenging exercises … ." (EMS Newsletter, December, 2002) "The present book ‘is designed for students who want to develop professional skill in stochastic calculus and its application to problems in finance’. … the textbook … retains a lovely lecture style focusing basic ideas and not formalities and technical details of stochastic processes needed for finance. I can strongly recommend this book to students of mathematics and physics as well as non-experts in probability theory who are interested in stochastic finance." (H. –J. Girlich, Zeitschrift für Analysis und ihre Anwendungen, Vol. 21 (4), 2002) "The last few years have been a fertile period for books on stochastic calculus and its financial implications, but this one differs from the many mainstream treatments … . The style of the book creates the atmosphere of a lively lecture … . Each chapter ends with a section of carefully chosen exercises, preceded by some motivating remarks. … I really liked the book." (R. Grübel, Statistics & Decisions, Vol. 20 (4), 2002) "This book gives an introduction to stochastic calculus … with applications in mathematical finance. … As the preface says, ‘This is a text with an attitude, and it is designed to reflect, wherever possible and appropriate, a prejudice for the concrete over the abstract’. This is also reflected in the style of writing which is unusually lively for a mathematics book. … on the whole, the results are presented carefully and thoroughly … ." (Martin Schweizer, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 962, 2001) "This is a book on stochastic calculus of a different flavour. Intuition is not sacrificed for rigour nor rigour for intuition. The main results are reinforced with simple special cases … . This is one of the most interesting and easiest reads in the discipline; a gem of a book." (D. L. McLeish, Short Book Reviews, Vol. 21 (1), 2001)

Product Details :
Paperback: 312 pages
Publisher: Springer (December 1, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1441928626
ISBN-13: 978-1441928627
Product Dimensions: 6.1 x 0.6 x 9.2 inches

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Brownian Motion Calculus 1st edition, Ubbo F. Wiersema



"Wiersema has written a splendid book … focusing on the core elements of the theory in a simplistic and operational manner. The reader is gently invited into the world of Ito integration and differentiation, where the material is carefully selected to highlight how the calculus functions rather than going into all theoretical details. The author provides many examples with relevance for financial applications, and each chapter ends with a good choice of exercises. The book is unique in its concise and inspiring style. This introduction to Brownian motion calculus is powerful, and highly recommended."
–Professor Fred Espen Benth, Centre of Mathematics for Applications, Department of Mathematics, University of Oslo

"Stochastic calculus fundamentals are covered with a high level of clarity in a consistent step-by-step manner. The book has the right blend of theory and practical applications allowing to develop a thorough understanding of the subject and to build a solid foundation for the future hands-on work."
–Michael Zaidel, Senior Analyst – Quantitative Analytics, Toronto Dominion Bank Financial Group

"The clear and open explanation of concepts combined with the many useful examples make this an invaluable reference both for students and professionals who need to gain an intuitive grasp and solid understanding of this vital subject. Wiersema's approachable style is sure to become a favourite amongst practitioners as it has amongst his students."
–Andrew Scourse, structured finance professional in a global bank

"Ubbo's book is an extremely clearly written introduction to the important topic of applied stochastic calculus. In particular, it contains many illustrative worked-out examples and applications. This is a very well-balanced and structured guided-tour through the subject, where every step is carefully motivated and explained. Students will love this book!"
–Thorsten Rheinlander, Reader, London School of Economics

This is an awesome book!

It follows a non-rigorous (non measure-theoretic) approach to brownian motion/SDEs, similar in that respect to the traditional calculus textbook approach. The author provides plenty of intuition behind results, plenty of drills and generally solves problems without jumping any intermediate step.

I have read most books of the kind and this one is clearly the best. It is suitable for undergraduate education, namely in engineering and in finance. It may be a bit on the light side for maths undergrads, although could be used for a light intro to these topics.

This is really the best introduction book on the subject matter I have ever read. If you are not a current student in shool or newly graduate with math training, or a math teacher, but have some general college math training then this book is the best introduction for you on this subject. Although I had read some basic abstract math starting with the set theory long time ago, it took me too much time to proceed in reading standard intro math to financial engineering. Thanks to the author's introduction, when I come back to those FE math it feels SO easy now.

i have some familiarity regarding brownian motion. Many stochastic calculus books go into deep mathematical reasoning. I really enjoyed the authors approach to the problem. This is clearly the way one should start into the subject prior to starting an MFE program. Then after reading the book, one can read the book by sean dineen etc or other stochastic calculus books which go into more rigorous detail. This book must not be missed by any chance. It will give you an edge in MFE programs knowing this material. He has written this book in the same style as many calculus books which is very helpful. Once you master this book, you can go into a move proof based subject matter.

This book is a very clear, comprehensive introduction to stochastic calculus. It is long on intuition and is particularly useful for practitioners who need to apply these concepts. Very strong in its structure, this book provides derivations, examples, exercises and a very helpful set of appendices. If only all financial engineering books were written this well!

Presentation of concepts are exceptionally clear. Explanations on nice but important points are never missed out.
The flow of the contents of the book are very well structured. The level is just right for first beginners to learn the
subject .The solutions of the exercises at the back of the book are invaluable and particularly helpful to self-study.
All in all ,this is a book which I have hoped to have for years ,having given me the momentum to study the subject ,hopefully to complete reading it seriously from start and finish ! A book highly recommended for undergraduates who
first study Brownian Motion calculus.

Product Details :
Paperback: 330 pages
Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (December 8, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0470021705
ISBN-13: 978-0470021705
Product Dimensions: 6.2 x 0.8 x 8.8 inches

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The Zone of Insolvency: How Nonprofits Avoid Hidden Liabilities & Build Financial Strength, 1st edition, Ron Mattocks



Recently, the CNBC "American Greed" TV series launched with a memorable episode that wounded and embarrassed nonprofits (Harvard, Penn State, and dozens of evangelical ministries) a decade ago. "The Con Man" was John Bennett. CNBC reported, "Some said he was a visionary and a godsend. His New Era Philanthropy foundation doled out $100 million nationwide. Was it too good to be true?"

Yes. Could it have been avoided? Maybe. Will it happen again? It's not likely if you follow the well-researched and documented counsel in Ron Mattock's new book. "The Zone of Insolvency," writes Mattocks, "is a period of corporate financial distress, sandwiched between solvency and total insolvency."

Mattocks puts a spotlight on the alarming number--up to 450,000--of nonprofits that are operating under financial distress, the Zone of Insolvency, and how the courts have expanded board member legal responsibilities and liabilities in these cases. It's fascinating and scary reading. He gives key lessons from the success and failure stories of 10 organizations, including: United Way of America, New Era Philanthropy, Baptist Foundation of Arizona, American Red Cross, and others. The book is organized into four parts: perspective, naming the disease, symptoms and the cure.

You'll get hooked reading the first 10 chapters (10 nonprofits in trouble) and you'll be comforted with his practical suggestions for executives and board members. He includes sample board policies for avoiding or escaping the Zone of Insolvency--and every chapter concludes with "Five Great Questions for Your Next Board Meeting."

The author says every board must ask itself, "Do we exercise a healthy dose of skepticism in carrying out our fiduciary responsibilities?" And how about this one: "If we decided today to close this organization, would we complete the close-down with net assets remaining, or net liability?"

This important book expands on the themes in my Board Bucket and Budget Bucket, two of the 20 buckets in my book, Mastering The Management Buckets: 20 Critical Competencies for Leading Your Business or Non-profit. Caution! Some board members may get cold feet and resign from your board after reading The Zone of Insolvency. That's not necessarily a bad thing.


The book is logically laid out and well indexed. The author sets the scene by briefly taking the reader through case studies of ten non-profit organizations who dealt with challenges to the solvency of the enterprise. He identifies the responsibilities of each organization's board of directors and how each either fell short or rose to the occasion.

Each chapter is presented in a bite size format, coming quickly to the main teaching point and facilitating a quick return to any portion for further thought and future reference. A check list is provided at the close of the chapter to drive home the key points and enable their customization and/or application to your particular area of responsibility.

After a thorough portrayal of the various pitfalls a non-profit can and frequently does face, the final section presents various cure scenarios covering the analysis and assessment of a non-profit structure. These include a discussion of courses of action that will, first, prevent/avoid failure (insolvency); second, enable the honest assessment of the situation to recognize that failure (bankruptcy) is possible or even probable and third, in the worst case, guide the dissolution of the organization with no further or minimal damage to its distributed assets.

This is a very valuable work that can serve as an excellent textbook and discussion guide in both academic and business seminar environments and as a desk-side reference for all who serve in any oversight capacity for a non-profit enterprise.

This is an excellent book on what the tip offs are for a non-profit that is looking like it might go belly up. After working for several non-profits as a board member, I wish I had had this in hand before some of the board meetings, as I would have had a much better way of relating what I saw to those who were so mission-oriented that they refused to see what they should have seen in the business end of a non-profit.

The book takes you through several non-profit horror stories and bad dream situations to give you a feel for how bad it can get, and what they board members may have to face. It details several bad deals, scandals, and non-profits working through difficulties to give you a flavor of what can happen. While I would have liked it to be a bit more definitive about what certain things were about, and when things will have to be dealt with, it is certainly a revelation about how mismanaged non-profits can be, and what it may take to right the ship. It also deals with the event that all 'true believer's' dread, when to close the curtain.

While a bit short on details at some junctures, it nevertheless details the hazards, and what good board members need to be aware of to prevent themselves and their organizations from falling into the Zone of Insolvency, which can become a personal liability issue as well.

What sucks is AMAZON sending me notices every 6 hours to do another review of this book!

Product Details :
Hardcover: 240 pages
Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (April 11, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0470245816
ISBN-13: 978-0470245811
Product Dimensions: 6.3 x 0.9 x 9.2 inches

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Accounting and Finance Policies and Procedures 1st edition, Rose Hightower



"The author provides an excellent framework for organizations to use in establishing and updating policies and procedures. This book is an excellent resource that auditors can use to steer management to as an example of a structured approach to policy and procedure development." (Auditnet.org, June 2008)

Policies and procedures represent the foundation of internal controls for organizations. It is important they be clearly written, current, and comprehensive. The author provides an excellent framework for organizations to use in establishing and updating policies and procedures. The book begins with a chapter on how to use the book. The book is structured as a final product that is supported by a Web site containing all the sample documents in Microsoft Word format. Rose explains the steps before getting started, followed by getting started with the program, developing the table of contents and a self assessment exercise. The rest of the book is devoted to sample policies and procedures. There is a continuity of structure for each document which details the scope, the policy, control/areas of responsibility, and contact and exhibit if necessary. Internal auditors are sometimes in a position where they recommend that management update policies and procedures or create them where none exist. This book is an excellent resource that auditors can use to steer management to as an example of a structured approach to policy and procedure development.

The book seems to be well laid out and covers a broad amount of information. It is relevant for business with focus around accounting and controllership to support governance and good business practices. The book does not specifically focus on non-profit organizations but the principles and content is there to assist.

Indicators that the time is right for a Policy and Procedure program
* Are you within the 99% of companies which have ineffective controls over financial reporting due to a "lack" within Accounting and Finance documentation, policies and procedures?
* Does your documentation reside within many server repositories and not easily accessible by employees?
* Do different areas use the same term or acronym to mean different things?
* Does your company work cross functionally, not in silos and as a team?
* Does the documentation undergo a review and approval cycle?
* Are policies and procedures linked to internal controls and audit checklists?

It is time for a documentation strategy refresh when there is a need for:
* A clear hierarchy of documents with...
o Policy setting the rules and principles setting the tone from the top
o Procedure classifying work phases linked to policies
o Work Instructions identifying step by step details linked to procedures
* Document ownership of the content and accountability for deployment
* Standardized templates, and process which ensures cross functional content review and approval
* A focused Program Manager to coordinate and manage the strategy, content and program

Product Details :
Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (April 9, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0470259620
ISBN-13: 978-0470259627
Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 0.7 x 10.8 inches

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Market Risk Analysis, Practical Financial Econometrics 2nd edition, Carol Alexander



Consistent with the title, the second volume in Ms. Alexander's series covers common and practical econometric models. This is a great desk reference when you are out of practice or like in my case moving from a more segmented line of business back to a broader portfolio. I have the entire series of four and I refer to this volume and the fourth volume (VaR) quite frequently. While I still have a copy of Baltagi on my desk, Alexander's book truly is more practical because the examples are contemporary.

practical financial econometrics is a very useful book for all connected with the field of finance.

It is a real treasure. The description in the book is very practical. It successfully addresses and accommodates the issues that researcher encounters.

The efforts of the author for crafting such a master piece is highly appreciable.The book offers much more via discussion forum as well. It is really wonderful and creative idea to remain connected with the world's greatest authority in the field of risk management through the websites. I think these website have been adding the life in the book and make it an alive entity.

Like her previous book "Market Models", this book is very well written, clearly explained, and very complete. I like her style of writing because it's precise, intuitive, and goes straight to the point. Carol Alexander is a seasoned professional, and that is certainly reflected in this book. I like it a lot and recommend it highly.

This book is a "must have" for financial analysts. Carol Alexander is one of the best technical finance writers around, and has the ability to convey complex concepts in a way that practitioners can understand.

I particularly like the chapters on GARCH and copulas. She includes loads of examples that bring the subject matter to life.

Carol writes both cogently and accessibly on financial mathematics here, covering a very broad area of topics in an easily intelligible manner - a welcome break from some of the drier mathematical texts. It definitely merits space on your desk if you're a practitioner or student - however small your desk is!

Just one hint, from somebody who learned a lot from Carol - if somebody with her experience decides to invest 5 years in sharing their understanding of the world of finance, I wouldn't miss the chance to read it! The scope of the book is unparalleled, and it doesn't come at the expense of thoroughness and clarity. And what you wouldn't get from four other books on those topics, is a unified, consolidated, approach to analysing and understanding areas which traditionally have been seen in isolation. I don't need to mention what difference it makes in practice, once you have the details, to be able to take one step back and see the bigger picture.

Professor Alexander has continued the excellent benchmark standard she first set with "Market Models" some years ago with this comprehensive 4-volume set, which should be on the desk of every investment banker and structured finance practitioner. One expects a thorough grounding in the subject with her books, this volume carries on the tradition but also blends in the theory with implementation. It also covers latest developments in structured credit...as someone who has structured and closed CDO, RMBS, N-PL ABS and ABCP deals myself (both cash and synthetic) I found the treatment of credit to be very worthwhile and high quality, well worth getting for that part of the volume alone. The placing of all related topics into one handsome set is also useful, as all material is gathered in one place.

It is always gratifying to see someone who set high standards with his/her first book surpass them with later works...with this volume, Professor Alexander has written (for now!) the last word in financial market risk management. Highly recommended to practitioners and graduate students alike.

Alexander's style is well-suited to this vast topic, where she efficiently distills the material down to the fundamentals before giving various examples. To paraphrase Einstein, Alexander makes it "as simple as possible, but no simpler". Both as a student and now as a financial practitioner I appreciate when books don't waste my time.

This volume covers many topics in common with other texts - equity factor models and GARCH for example - but this is the best treatment I've seen, and Alexander's wealth of experience shines in the sections on forecasting and model evaluation. The accompanying CD opens up an additional level of interaction if you're willing to sit at your computer while studying, but the manageable format makes each of the four volumes of "Market Risk Analysis" quite portable. All four books are exceptionally well indexed and divided into meaningful sections for either study or reference, the notation is clear and consistent, the diagrams helpful and the worked examples are clear without being verbose.

I would recommend that anyone with a specific application in mind buy at least the first volume, which establishes the foundation maths and notation, along with one or more of the latter volumes. Students, or anyone interested in covering additional ground, will benefit from the whole set as one of the definitive reference works in this fascinating but rapidly evolving field.

We certainly need more accurate financial analysis. The recent bad news in the US financial markets is in part due to the inaccuracies in existing financial models that were used by Wall Street firms to value complex financial instruments.

The book explains many of these instruments. Especially the derivative securities like CDOs, where underlying primary products like mortgages were aggregated and the resultant cash flows then divvied up into multiple tranches. Each tranche having different yield and risk. So if you want to get beyond the headlines, the text gives an education into what all this means.

But with the benefit of a little hindsight, look carefully at how the book describes the risk models that were used to "understand" the instruments. In the real world, the assumptions of several failed and are failing dramatically.

Product Details :
Hardcover: 426 pages
Publisher: Wiley; Volume II edition (May 27, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0470998016
ISBN-13: 978-0470998014
Product Dimensions: 6.9 x 1.2 x 9.9 inches

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Recursive Macroeconomic Theory 2nd edition, Lars Ljungqvist



"This revised edition is an excellent resource, both for those interested in state-of-the-art research in macroeconomics and for those anxious to learn the tools that are used to do it."--Wouter J. Denhaan, Professor of Economics, London Business School

" Recursive Macroeconomic Theory thoroughly works through a wide variety of applications of recursive methods to the analysis of central themes in macroeconomics. As Alexander the Great is said to have always kept a copy of the Iliad under his pillow, I think the modern macroeconomist would do well to keep a copy of this excellent work close at hand." Fernando Alvarez, Professor of Economics, University of Chicago

"*Recursive Macroeconomic Theory* thoroughly works through a wide variety of applications of recursive methods to the analysis of central themes in macroeconomics. As Alexander the Great is said to have always kept a copy of the Iliad under his pillow, I think the modern macroeconomist would do well to keep a copy of this excellent work close at hand."--Fernando Alvarez, Professor of Economics, University of Chicago

In fact, I find this book too difficult for me. I am interested in economics from various perspectives, I will keep on trying to understand the details of the book.

It was a great introduction to optimal contract theory and heterogeneous agent models for me.
Now use it to teach a grad macro class.

Generally:
a) it is comprehensive,
b) it is concise where it needs to be concise and goes into details where details are needed,
c) it is the fastest way to get introduced to dynamic economics.

I ordered this book Recursive Macroeconomic Theory online, chose one day shipping and got it in one day as promised. The book reached in perfect condition. In fact, I ordered it online to save money as I found $80 charged at Uconn Coop Bookstore expensive. However, after I ordered it and clicked one day shipping the price was just a few cents below $80. I think amazon.com should be clear about the price it mentions on its website. It should not give customers wrong perceptions about the actual price it charges. Customers have the right to see the price including shipping right before they make the payment. This is the reason I give it a four star. Otherwise, I think the product deserved a five star. I am really disappointed about a seller associated with amazon.com. That seller has not yet delivered the product as promised and gives no track of shipping details of the product although it is one week since I ordered it.

The book is certainly written by distinguished people, but it seems to me that their focus in writting this book was more to exhibit mathematical methods to solve problems rather than discuss the problems themselves. Apparently the book is meant for training mathematical skills in dynamic programming, and prepare you for computer simulations of macroeconomic problems. But don't use it for understanding macroeconomics.

In general, the authors get into mathematical discussions that divert attention from the problem itself, and at the same time they don't explain why they are doing all these. Reading the book needs a lot of background knowledge and self-intuition. Apart from that some chapters are educational and fit for class work.

The first chapters cover mathematical basics about random process and Markov chains and estimation. They are the good chapters. The chapters on partial equilibrium, complete markets ad incomplete markets are also the ones that are noramlly used in class lectures. The book's coverage of consumption theory and economic growth is weak and insufficient. I would recommend Romer or Blanchard&Fisher book for that. The chapter on search and job matching is also simplistic and again not enough. In most of the chapters, technicality dominates concepts, so having a complementary textbook can be great help.

For one thing, the book has a lot of misprints and mistakes too, which seem to be fixed in the newer edition.

This is a perfect book for three reasons; i) it is perfect for those who wish to learn modern macroeconomics. The book develops necessary knowledge and tools to be applied to dynamic economics, ii) Sargent is one of most prominent and leading macroeconomists of the world, and he should be Nobel prize winner in Economics, iii) the book is published by MIT.

When I recently left my job as cryer in a grim, north-eastern town, I was made the head of recursive macroeconomic theory at a major international bank. I could have done with a simpler introduction than this, to be honest, as my knowledge of RMT was limited. But now I hold my own in meetings simply by spouting a few long words from this book (mainly "macroeconomic" and "recursive" - theory doesn't seem to impress as much) and delegating to underlings.

The first time i read the book, i'm sure this should not be the first text book for Dynamic Macroeconomics everyone should read. It's better to read somewhere else as an introduction to the idea of dynamic macroeconomics. Romer 'Advanced Macroeconomics' and Stokey, Lucas, Prescott 'Recursive Methods' are more appropriate to start. After gainning some similarity with Dynamic Methods, it would be much better to study models about macroeconomics presented in the book.

This book is the presentations of various models using Dynamic / Recursive Macroeconomics. It makes them easier and time-saving to study many kinds of model in a semester. It's GOOD & HELPFUL IN THIS SENSE. However, it might not be a good book for study in depth. You are better to study from the original papers for the same topics.

I think, this book is similar to Tirole 'Theory of Industrial Organization' in spirit, but different in content. They both show the simplified version of various models in the fields.

If you think you like this style, you would like to have it. But if you don't, it might be better just to skim (from the library) and read the original papers.

Hope this comment would be helpful for you to make a decision

This text is perhaps the most accessible introduction to modern macroeconomics available. What I feel to be the greatest contributions of the text are the problems-- in each chapter, they start from the basics and build upon one another until you are formulating elaborate models that are the basis for much of the current discourse in the literature. The approaches used are so powerful and the questions tackled so varied that you cannot help believing that the recursive method is the future, not only for traditional issues in macroeconomics, but throughout the discipline. Hey, the book stands out so much, I decided to write a review!

Sargent continues his tradition of applying new methods to get to the bottom of macroeconomic phenom'ns. Should get the Nobel one of these years for work in rational expectations and macroeconimcs econometric techniques.

This book is much more readible than Sargent's dynamic macroeconomic. It explains all the mordern Dynamic macroeconomic theory in accesible way. Authors also introduce simple numerical methods. If you were dissapointed with Sargent's book,you will be satisfied with this.

Product Details :
Hardcover: 1120 pages
Publisher: The MIT Press; 2nd edition (September 3, 2004)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 026212274X
ISBN-13: 978-0262122740
Product Dimensions: 7 x 1.9 x 9 inches

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Quantitative Methods for Finance 1st edition, Terry Watsham



I am giving this 3 stars because it does have value for a certain population of readers. Just not for students, or professionals.

Any comparison to a book like Netfci is just not valid.

First, as a book on math, it is terrible. Even as a quantative finance book it is not that great, but at least it does provide useful techniques for the layman.

The math used in financial engineering is very complex, it is an intersection of both theoretical and applied math. Which is why Wall Street hires math types like engineers and physics people.
Though any good undergraduate program should provide most of the math, and if a student is going into Financial Engineer a few additional advanced math course will fill the gaps. Which is where Netfci and other textbooks are for students.

Now on to this book. This book really is helpful to the layperson who does not understand the math to even read Hull or other books which present the theories. An Adult who had the math x years ago will find this of value, and a person who wants to understand how to actually approach a number of the methods.

The book does provide step by step so you can actually solve equations which baffled you before. You will understand what the various parameters and the odd notation enough to use the equation.

So it gets 3 stars because it has a value.

The problem is that the authors avoid alot of topics, and they explain it away by saying it is a finance book when they minimize the math. And they use the excuse it is a math book when they minimize the finance topics.

The authors take the easy way out and simply avoid difficult material. The math is just absurd. Median, Mode, and Mean get 4 pages, yet Partial Derivatives get a paragraph. Most of the math is devoted to overexplaining basic statistics and probability which you can get from any basic book on stats. And they don't miss important little details.

They assume the reader is sophsiticated enough to understand differential calculus with litle depth, but the same reader needs chapter after chapter of basic statistics. The authors make great leaps when it comes to the theoretical math which is probably the biggest stumbling block for most readers. They provide enough so you will understand their step by step for using the equation and to understand the equation when you see it in other books.

It is just amazing how much detail they provide on basic math, yet jump over anything complex. They avoid this in the finance part as well, and some topics are given very limited coverage. APT is one that disappointed me the most.

This is a great overview of many of the mathematical techniques in finance. The writing is very clear, as are the examples. Compared to the usual academic material, this book is a gem.

A few of the topics are a bit too difficult to cover with a short review. The book covers basic calculus well, but for the coverage of partial differential equations I'd want a bit more depth to make sure I understood the issue.

If you're studying finance, this book is a great resource.

This book is pretty bad. It goes into a lot of details on very simple calculations and manages to make them seem more complex than they actually are. This is sepecially true in the first chapter on interest rates.

When it comes into advanced topics, there is a lot of hand waving and pulling of critical results from nothing. Worse is the fact that when these handwaving occurs, the reader is not informed.

The authors also tend to over simplify advanced topics and do not ensure a consistent notation. People should not depend on this book to build their foundation in financial maths as you would pick up a lot of misconceptions that will hinder understanding of more advanced topics later. This book serves best as a collection of formulae in basic financial maths that you can refer to when you can't remember a formula.

Both the CFA notes and IOA notes on quant do a much better job of explaining financila maths compared to this book

This book actually can be read by non-math majors.

Watsham really makes the effort needed to make
the book "readable" to non-quants.

Unlike Neftci and Wilmott, who jump to more advanced material
without really explaining most of the details,
Watsham explains all the needed details.

However, Watsham's book covers much fewer topics
than Neftci's or Wilmott's (Quant finance) book covers.

I hope Mr. Watsham next edition includes more of the
topics that are found in Netfci's book.

This book actually can be read by non-math majors.

Watsham really makes the effort needed to make
the book "readable" to non-quants.

Unlike Neftci and Wilmott, who jump to more advanced material
without really explaining most of the details,
Watsham explains all the needed details.

However, Watsham's book covers much fewer topics
than Neftci's or Wilmott's (Quant finance) book covers.

I hope Mr. Watsham next edition includes more of the
topics that are found in Netfci's book.

This book targets readers who have little or no familiarity with statistics and calculus (or who, like me, has forgotten much of these two disciplines. The authors do a great job of explaning why we use the methods they explain. Clear examples are provided. Complex subjects are built up from simpler principles. I highly recommend this bood to students seeking a thorough grounding in the quantitative methods underlying the pricing of assets and derivatives, portfolio management, risk management, etc.

This book is totally focused at the real world and is aimed at practioners. Wanting to get a handle on Quantitative Finance I initially started with Neftci's "Intorduction to Financial Mathematics" - which of course is an 'introduction' more suited to theoretical physicists.

But Quantitative Methods in Finance is aimed at the practioner and concentrates on the application, not pure math. Yet it gives the tools to step into the more sophisticated stuff and covers all the key topics needed for practioners.

This book and the companion "Futures and Options in Risk Management" should be hailed as classics. Thanks for finally getting to the point for all us practioners out there who actually do these calculations as opposed to reading tons of equations about them.

I eagerly await the next edition.

Product Details :
Paperback: 408 pages
Publisher: Cengage Learning EMEA; 1 edition (December 19, 1996)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 186152367X
ISBN-13: 978-1861523679
Product Dimensions: 7.4 x 0.8 x 9.7 inches

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Public Choice III 3rd edition, Dennis C. Mueller



"No student or teacher of public choice and no researcher working at the intersection of economics and politics can afford to not have a copy of Public Choice III within easy reach. Public Choice


This is a great book! As a political-science graduate student I've been exposed to a great deal of game-theory and rat-choice in my seminar classes, but, unfortunately, it has come in the form of numerous papers, piles of books, and several classes that did not build off of one another. I was left with the feeling that it was a very, very important subject, but it was presented in a manner that left me, as a student, with an incomplete picture of the topic and the breadth of work that has gone on in this field.

Mueller's achievements in this volume have been three:

1. Coherent presentation of the theory of public choice / rational politics.

2. Discussion of the most important empirical work that has gone on in this field in a unified fashion that leads one naturally into further inquiry in this area.

3. Logically organizes and presents the material in a way that reinforces concepts, logic, and thinking in the book.

These three things make this book a great review or introductory text to the field of public choice / rational politics that should be on the "must have" list of every serious student of politics and economics. Moreover, not being terribly skilled at mathematics myself, the material is presented both through intuitive written discussions, fairly simplistic "example" equations that are pretty easy to follow if you've had a "principles" microecon course with calculus, and, which I greatly appreciate, a fair amount of graphs. Moreover, the bibliography that the book draws on is very, very extensive...meaning that it has the additional utility of being a handy jumping off point if you're doing research in this area.

My only complaint, and this is a minor one, is that I would like a bit more math in the book either at the end of each chapter or in an appendix that works out, step-by-step, some of the additional concepts he runs over that aren't dealt with mathematically in the main text of the chapters themselves.

This, at least in my opinion, is an excellent book for the graduate student interested in learning about public choice / rational politics.

Product Details :
Paperback: 788 pages
Publisher: Cambridge University Press; 3 edition (April 17, 2003)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0521894751
ISBN-13: 978-0521894753
Product Dimensions: 6 x 1.6 x 9 inches

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Modern Project Finance: A Casebook, 1st edition, Benjamin C. Esty



This book is simply a collection of HBS case studies: nothing more, nothing less. For those who are not familiar with Top 20 MBA case study format (I graduated from Top 20 MBA school as recently as 2006), here is how it works:

"Company X wants to achieve Y result. Here is the data on Company X. Here is why they want to achieve the Y result. Here are some additional factors that affect the Company's decision-making process.

The Company X has options A, B, and C to get to Y. Which one of these options the Company X do you think should choose?" This is where the case ends - the correct answer is not disclosed - it is assumed one would discuss this case further in a classroom setting.

Therefore, unless one is discussing in great details the case with a professor or project finance professional, you won't know the answer / learn how to arrive at solution (read: model) yourself.

Therefore, this book is absolutely USELESS for self-study - i.e. for someone who wants to learn more about the field of project finance. Consider yourself forewarned!

I am not in a finance field per se, but the case studies were easy to follow and analyze and provided for excellent readability. The amount of detail included in the presentations of each case is amazing. The cases span the entire world and cross numerous industries. There is also a noted focus on some projects spearheaded by the IFC.

It seems like this text would benefit anyone in the field while also interesting those who have never come across project finance.

I must admit that I am a great fan of Professor Benjamin Esty.

When I bought this book I knew that I was going to come across well researched project finance case studies. The detail into which he goes into each transaction shows beyond doubt that he actually met/talked to the professionals who were an the coal-face of each transaction.

This book should also be a MUST-READ for all recent graduates who are starting out in Project Finance as it's written in a very user friendly fashion.

At the very beginning of this text book one is informed, contrary to popular belief, that Project Finance has been around for a very long time!

Five Stars material no doubt!

Msingathi "Msi" Mnyengeza

Johannesburg, South Africa

This is an outstanding book and a very important resource for me as an instructor in project finance. The cases in this book are some the best that I have seen and are very rich in complexity and in the coverage of concepts.

The book gives an interesting insight in Project Finance and is especially valuable for giving the rationale in using PF versus traditional Corporate Finance.

It gives evidence of the matter through a step by step procedure so that every case adds some knowledge. Excellent terminology section.

For not experienced professional, maybe it should be read in conjunction with some manual providing the basic principle and more insight in financial and legal technicalities.

I used this for guidance as I was preparing a financing proposal for a methanol and formaldehyde chemical plant complex (US$250MM) and along with 'Principles of Project Finance' by E.Yescombe, I was well guided and my proposal was successful.

Product Details :
Paperback: 544 pages
Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (October 17, 2003)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0471434256
ISBN-13: 978-0471434252
Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 1.2 x 10.9 inches

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Fractals and Scaling In Finance: Discontinuity, Concentration, Risk, 1st edition, Benoit B. Mandelbrot



From the reviews "Mandelbrot writes with economy and felicity, and he interperses the more mathematical sections with frank historical anecdotes ... All in all, this is a strange but wonderful book." (PHYSICS TODAY) Statistical Papers, 2000: "... this is a most useful collection of Mandelbrot's work economics, it provides an excellent starting point for anybody interested in the origin of many current topics in empirical finance or the distribution of income."

This was an interesting perspective from Mandelbrot about the inept models already used in the financial industry. I would love to find time to try these new ideas out in my models.

The book is quite technical and is really a collection of many research papers. So it is not for those who don't like calculus in their face.

Failed to mention old musty smell of book. Wouldn't have purchased this copy, especially for price paid. Would expect seller to be more forthcoming.

This was an interesting perspective from Mandelbrot about the inept models already used in the financial industry. I would love to find time to try these new ideas out in my models.

The book is quite technical and is really a collection of many research papers. So it is not for those who don't like calculus in their face.

Found the papers contained in the book filled in many of the blanks I had after reading some of the other Mandelbrot books. the math was tractable and not too difficult for a non expert. Overall, I would recommend this book to those wanting to get a better understanding of scalability and a basis for mild, soft and wild randomness.

This book deserves to receive 6 stars.Mandelbrot serves up overwhelming empirical,statistical,and historical evidence that financial decision makers are dead wrong in assuming,contrary to the available evidence, that a normal probability distribution describes the outcomes accurately in financial markets .In fact,the Cauchy distribution is substantially more relevant than the normal distribution.Mandelbrot's work simply means that the standard theoretical models taught in all colleges and universities,the CAPITAL ASSET PRICING MODEL(CAPM) and the BLACK-SCHOLES equation, give correct answers if and only if the relevant probability distributions about the movement of prices in financial markets over time are all normal.However, the evidence shows that they are NOT normal.Mandelbrot confirms ,by massive data analysis, Keynes's original 1921 objections to the misuse in application of (by merely assuming the applicability of such a distribution without examining the actual data)the normal probability distribution made in chapters 29 and 30 of the A Treatise on Probability(1921).Unfortunately,it appears that little,if any ,of Mandelbrot's scientific approach and analysis is being integrated into economics and finance.

in this book, Mandelbrot is trying to prove that first, the price movement's distribution is scaling invariant, meaning a security's log price-change's distribution is same as with its 5-min's or with its daily's(or even monthly); second, price movement is not purely random/normaldistribution/brownian/random walk on street(they are all same description), meaning if u use normal distribution as one of ur bases for ur model, u will not only be theoretically wrong, but also be punished in real-life trading, such as the case of long-term capital. third, price movement does have cycle, but it length can not be determined in trading time, meaning u will not be able to decide when those cycles are going to start or end; fourth, changes of price movements do concentrate, meaning big moves will happen continouesly, or very closely to each other. the major implication to me is that many current financial theories are wrong, specially, those using normal distribution(such as option model) as basic assumption for security price movement. it also may prove that some of current price-based models(such as some trend following system) have some merit. but manay systems based on channel(such as bollinger bands)will not work in long-run. with those in mind and many available mathematical tools, one should be able to build a good financial model.

To read this book you need truly to understand math and the markets. There is no questions that Mandelbrot is one of the greatest figures of our time. What he claimed based on his studies on cotton trading in the early 60s might not be close to the reality of today, but the way he approached it makes you think twice about the markets. Cotton trading is so different from stock market trading because it is either spoting trading or futures trading, and it is based on margins. The market usually has poor liquidity and with few players in it. The conclusions the book made could poorly extend to the general markets. The hard-to-follow math notations kept distracting me from following the main subjects. Anyway, this book will teach you something new, but you have to understand math and the markets, deeply.

Product Details :
Hardcover: 561 pages
Publisher: Springer; 1997 edition (September 18, 1997)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0387983635
ISBN-13: 978-0387983639
Product Dimensions: 6.1 x 1.2 x 9.2 inches

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A Course in Derivative Securities: Introduction to Theory and Computation, Springer Finance / Springer Finance Textbooks, 1st edition, Kerry Back



From the reviews of the first edition: "Professor Back has written a superb book on advanced derivatives. The book provides wonderfully clear explanations without sacrificing mathematical accuracy. I highly recommend this book for everyone who wants to understand more about this fascinating and important area." (Mark Broadie, Columbia University, New York) "Professor Kerry Back's book fills a void in the derivative literature by providing an excellent and much needed book for a second course in derivatives. The clear presentation and the choice of VBA as the software tool makes this a perfect textbook for such a course. Using VBA via excel is an excellent choice as it exhibits an "open source" environment that is readily available for users." (Eliezer Z. Prisman, York University, Toronto) "This book deals with pricing and hedging financial derivatives. … Computational methods are introduced and the text contains the Excel VBA routines corresponding to the formulas and procedures described in the book. This is valuable since computer simulation can help readers understand the theory. … The book under review succeeds in presenting intuitively advanced derivative modelling … . In my opinion, it provides a useful bridge between introductory books and the more advanced literature." (Benjamin Jourdain, Mathematical Reviews, Issue 2006 h) "This book contains a practical introduction to the mathematics of financial engineering. It can serve as an excellent bridge between the introductory books on derivative securities and those that provide advanced mathematical treatments. … the book presents a very wide spectrum of the problems and methods concerned with pricing and hedging derivatives in a quite accessible way. … it can be strongly recommended not only to be used as a course but also for those wishing to train themselves in this field." (Malgorzata Doman, Zentralblatt MATH, Vol. 1085, 2006) "The strength of this book is in its clarity in exposition of the complex … modern financial mathematics. The book is self-contained, and a student can learn the key elements of the main toolkits in financial engineering … . Further, the book provides useful exercises and VBA programs so that the students can simulate the results … . I recommend the book to an MBA program … . The book could also be used in some master programs in financial engineering and mathematical finance."

very practical for financial engineering. you definitely need to have read a beginning book on derivatives before tackling this book. i love this book because it focuses on implementation a lot and also gives a lot of intuition. overall, an excellent book

I have been teaching from the book, and found a number of virtues. I used it in a beginning graduate course, but one which was very interdisciplinary. I aimed at covering all the relevant topics for the subject, not stressing one (too much!) over the others.
Now the book is aimed at MBA students, and I used it in a course with students from a handful of departments.

But for this purpose the level and the details in Kerry Back's book was on target.
It helps student who come with a minimal mathematical background to be able quickly to absorb some main principles.

And at the same time it helps math students to understand ideas from economics and from finance.
The book offers an effective entry into the fundamentals of probability space, random variables, and Black-Scholes.

In particular, it offers insight into Black-Scholes, that doesn't presuppose, on the part of readers, a lot of PDE theory.
Kerry Back's choice of VBA/Excel offers way students can easily start to play with examples, and to generate their own examples.

For my use in a math course, I picked a number of books to use as supplementary reading, for example Oksendal et al, Krylov, Shreve, Wilmott et al, and Baz et al.

I found that this book is very useful for someone who wants to acquire an in depth understanding of financial derivatives without having advanced mathematical knowledge. The author is presenting all the fundamental issues related to financial derivatives in a simple and straigthforward manner and the reader has the opportunity to develop flexible vba codes in order to understand the material. I think that someone having worked on this book will be easier to procceed to more advanced books like Willmot's Quantitative Finance.

Product Details :
Paperback: 370 pages
Publisher: Springer; Softcover reprint of hardcover 1st ed. 2005 edition (December 1, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 3642064744
ISBN-13: 978-3642064746
Product Dimensions: 6.1 x 0.8 x 9.2 inches

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Financial Theory and Corporate Policy 4th Edition, Thomas E. Copeland



I bought a original version, I thought that piracy was bad but this item that I got instead of an original version was really dissappointing that I'm not going to buy anything else from Amazon.

I purchased book for a PhD finance class and I was extremely disappointed. The presentation of concepts was fragmented and inconsistent. It seems like each paragraph was written on a different day with no regard for what was put in the previous paragraph. Most of the material is not presented in an intuitive manner. If you want a deep understanding of financial theory, skip this book. It would be a better idea to simply memorize the relevant formulas and use the money to buy another book. To make things worse, the book itself is cheaply made and falls apart after a few weeks

My favorite part of this book is how the end of the chapter questions will ask you about concepts that were not even discussed. Badly written and confusing and cheap. If your professor uses this book consider switching classes!

This is considered poor quality even in a 3rd world country! Several pages are badly copied and misplaced in a manner that parts of the text have droped out of the page! The pages have little margin, and are low quality black and white copies of an original. It looks so cheap. The book has lots and lots of typos, the worse part is, most of them are in formulas and mathematical areas where precision is of key importance to ones ability to comprehend. Overally, I'm dissatissfied, might say dissapointed. $180? For this piece of low quality copy offset mess?

A perfect book to acquaint students with basic principles of finance theory emphasizing the theory of the firm's investment and financing decisions. To accomplish this goal, this textbook focus on basic concepts of decision making under risk, market efficiency, asset pricing, capital structure and dividend policy. This book is definitely for both a master and PhD levels. I used it in MBA Finance, and it did the trick. Please notice this book has a solution manual sold separately.

The book is not hardcover, it is not in the best conditions and it is the international version, which I hope it is not going to be a problem during the semester. That is not how the product is described.

I have worked now with the old version of this book for several years. Not because it is up to date, not because it contains rigorous proofs for every single element ever covered in finance, but because it contains a good summary of nearly everything that matters for this industry.

I am still astonished how comprehensive and still sufficiently advanced the topics have been already in the old version of this real classic. This is and will remain one of my favourite books. Thx for the updated version.

I have to go through this because it is a required professional exam textbook.
There are many things need to improved:

1, English language please. For example page 420.
2, Numbers do not match at several places. Again page 420.
3, Redendent logics, for example formula 9.2.
4, And why a bad example always a "he" and good example always "she"??? Sexual discrimination???

I expect 4th edition book not this bad. Maybe it is rushed to publish. "Price Theory" is a good book for example if people wonder.

I had this book for a PhD class in finance and have very few good words to say. The derivations should have been omitted: rarely is anything followed from the beginning to the end; the excerpts that are provided do not give much additional insight. Abundant typos in the formulas. In addition, the context of the models is often poorly presented and I was often left wondering what the situation or some assumptions are. Overall, relatively poorly written.

The book does give an overview of a lot of papers and as long as it is viewed as a starting point to read the papers it is acceptable. Still, the presentation is very fragmented and frustrating, creating a strong desire to read the original papers.

It took a while before this 4th edition came out. The 2nd and 3rd editions were pretty good, and the 4th ed still contains a lot of the old material. Clearly, this says something about finance theory - but it updates a lot of the empirical results and includes some new/relevant topics. I would have to agree that this book is probably a little shallow for the Ph.D. level, but most Ph.D. corporate finance courses probably would use papers rather than texts. Hence, that's where your actual derivations and the actual author's thought comes from. On the other hand, this book takes a very good approach and the authors are very respected in the field. In terms of a more advanced MBA text, I think that this is the best book available.

The book suggests it serves as a first course in finance for PhD students, and a second course in finance for master students. But as I see it, it is too shallow for PhD level reading, as it never explain some complicated derivation clear enough. You don't know how some statements or conclusions come from. There is just not enough explanation. I mean, the author could have said that "after some derivations" or "it can be shown that...", but they just give some results without mentioning whether it can be derived with some convoluted math but because it is out of the depth of the book, only the result is given, or it just comes easily from the assumptions or conditons. I have to figure their logic since usually I just like to thought about how to derive a result as I am supposed to read it as a first book in finance for a PhD student. Many times I have to give up figuring, as the steps the authors take from the conditions to the results are usually too big to guess. So I ended up with treat this book as an ElEMENTARY level book, giving up any derivation and analyzing, just taking the results as granted.

According to my roommate who is a master in finance student and who happened to look at my book for curiosity, this book looks too deep for a master level in some topics, e.g., real options. They try to talk about some complicated financial theories, not deep and clean enough for a PhD student and also not that intuitive to understand for a master student.

In sum, I would say, don't waste money and time on this book. If you are a PhD student, read some books or papers treating certain topics with clear derivations and depth. If you are a master student, though my opinion is sort of partial, the book does not provide good intution for some advanced topics.

Product Details :
Paperback: 1024 pages
Publisher: Prentice Hall; 4 edition (January 10, 2004)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0321127218
ISBN-13: 978-0321127211
Product Dimensions: 7.4 x 2 x 9.1 inches

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Sunday, June 2, 2013

Investment Performance Measurement 1st edition, Bruce J. Feibel



I got this after getting a job in the investment management industry that involved me looking at and using attribution and risk measures. Although I didn't do much calculating myself, I found this to be a very valuable guide for understanding both those concepts, and to empower me to do some basic excel calculations when required. I commend the author for clearly explaining these concepts in an organized way.

This book is so well written it is easy to absorb a huge amount of technical detail in a short time. Every concept and formula is explained in terms that assume no prior knowledge and then an Excel example is given to illustrate the mechanics underlying the math. It is a comprehensive reference that helps unravel the various formulas used to present investment performance metrics.

This book is an excellent review of performance measurement. It covers all of the areas and hits each with logical progression. Somewhat suprisingly, it holds up well as a straight through read as well as a reference.

Though I gave it five stars, I would have liked to see more on GIPS presentations. It does offer two chapters on the subject, but there is more that could have been included. That said, it is a great overview on GIPS in general.

This is one of the few books I have ever read twice. One reason is that, as a financial decision evaluation modeling consultant, I have found Investment Performance Measurement to be one of the few books on the topic repeatedly mentioned at financial firms, software providers and performance conferences. It is definitely a great foundation upon which to build an understanding of the field and I appreciated a number of its insights. I was also very impressed by the rarity of critical errors regarding the introduction it provides to technical matters.

I'm taking the Investments course within the Certified Financial Planner program. This book really helped clarify many of the terms and formulas we had to learn. The Mayo text covers the material, but from a more academic slant. I just wish I had bought the Feibel book well before the class started. It may not be technical enough for graduate students in Finance or people who normally read scholarly papers on investment theory. But for everyone else, like individual investors or people going back to school learning investing fundmentals, it's a great reference.

This book provides the novice a moderate reference to world of investment performance reporting, ala performance reporting 101.

As an IT management consult I can comfortably say there is no one authoritative reference on anything. That said, this text while historically and technically accurate does not represent nor provide meaningful examples of contemporary best practices.

Also, absent from the text are key discussions I would have benefited: the opportunities availed to a modern organization for large-scale automated computations - rather than all manual processes; linkages to the consumers of the performance information in various communities from client wealth tiers, brokerage operations, and financial advisers, analysts and money managers; and best practices for some of the new product and security types more prevalent in the 2006 era.

This book is very well thought out and takes it step by step from basic to advanced.

The really good thing about it is that it shows you how it looks in Excel which means it helps with how it would be entered into a computer.

I have read many books on this subject. This book is the best. It's well written, easy to understand, but in much detail.

Some other books only cover some calculation of returns, but this book covers all the subjects that matter to investment performance measurement: Return Measurement, Risk Measurement, Efficiency and Skill Measurement, Performance Attribution and Performance Presentation.

This book is not expensive. Good value for your money.

Excellent presentation of performance measurement. Great for the novice to advanced reader. Very concise yet thorough as well as a focused text. Calculations are clear with plenty of examples which makes this text very user-friendly. The reader can quickly begin to implement the formulas. Highly recommend to anyone interested in this important topic.

I find myself referencing Feibel's performance algorithms quite often. The book overall is well written, easy to follow, and quite organized. I recommend it to anyone that needs a good handbook alongside them or is new to performance calcs.

It is about time that a text like this has been made available. There are others out there, but none that cover the breadth and detail required to understand what is relevant today. Covering everything to how returns are calculated, and then moving on up to other more complex issues such as risk and attribution - it lays it all out, along with clear examples to support the text. It should sit as a reference tool on anyone's desk who works in investment management.

Product Details :
Hardcover: 368 pages
Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (February 4, 2003)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0471268496
ISBN-13: 978-0471268499
Product Dimensions: 6.5 x 1.1 x 9.6 inches

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