000 04035cam a22003015a 4500
001 17794973
005 20160215121923.0
008 130628s2013 enka frbf f001 0 eng d
020 _a9780199669486
040 _aDLC
_beng
_cDLC
_dDLC
_dEG-ScBUE
_dEG-ScBUE
082 0 4 _a332.6457015118
_bOXF
_222
245 0 4 _aThe Oxford handbook of credit derivatives /
_cedited by Alexander Lipton and Andrew Rennie.
246 3 0 _aCredit derivatives
260 _aOxford :
_bOxford University Press,
_c2013.
300 _axxvi, 677 p. :
_bill. ;
_c24 cm.
490 0 _aOxford handbooks in finance
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and indexes.
505 0 _aPART I: INTRODUCTION -- 1. Non-technical Introduction -- 2. Technical Introduction -- PART II: STATISTICAL OVERVIEW -- 3. Default Recovery Rates and LGD in Credit Risk Modelling and Practice -- 4. A Guide to Modelling Credit Term Structures -- 5. Statistical Data Mining Procedures in Generalized Cox Regressions -- PART III: SINGLE AND MULTI-NAME THEORY -- 6. An Exposition of CDS Market Models -- 7. Single and Multi-name Credit Derivatives: Theory and Practice -- 8. Marshall-Olkin Copula Based Models -- 9. Contagion Models in Credit Risk -- 10. Markov Chain Models of Portfolio Credit Risk -- 11. Counterparty Risk in Credit Derivative Contracts -- 12. Credit Value Adjustment in the Extended Structural Default Model -- PART IV: BEYOND NORMALITY -- 13. A New Philosophy of the Market -- 14. An EVT Primer for Credit Risk -- 15. Saddlepoint Methods in Portfolio Theory -- PART V: SECURITZATION -- 16. Quantitative Aspects of the Collapse of the Parallel Banking System -- 17. Home Price Derivatives and Modelling -- 18. A Valuation Model for ABS CDOs.
520 8 _aFrom the late 1990s, the spectacular growth of a secondary market for credit through derivatives has been matched by the emergence of mathematical modelling analysing the credit risk embedded in these contracts. This book aims to provide a broad and deep overview of this modelling, covering statistical analysis and techniques, modelling of default of both single and multiple entities, counterparty risk, Gaussian and non-Gaussian modelling, and securitisation. Both reduced-form and firm-value models for the default of single entities are considered in detail, with extensive discussion of both their theoretical underpinnings and practical usage in pricing and risk. For multiple entity modelling, the now notorious Gaussian copula is discussed with analysis of its shortcomings, as well as a wide range of alternative approaches including multivariate extensions to both firm-value and reduced form models, and continuous-time Markov chains.
520 8 _aOne important case of multiple entities modelling - counterparty risk in credit derivatives - is further explored in two dedicated chapters. Alternative non-Gaussian approaches to modelling are also discussed, including extreme-value theory and saddle-point approximations to deal with tail risk. Finally, the recent growth in securitisation is covered, including house price modelling and pricing models for asset-backed CDOs. The current credit crisis has brought modelling of the previously arcane credit markets into the public arena. Lipton and Rennie with their excellent team of contributors, provide a timely discussion of the mathematical modelling that underpins both credit derivatives and securitisation. Though technical in nature, the pros and cons of various approaches attempt to provide a balanced view of the role that mathematical modelling plays in the modern credit markets.
520 8 _aThis book will appeal to students and researchers in statistics, economics, and finance, as well as practitioners, credit traders, and quantitative analysts.
650 0 _aCredit derivatives
_xMathematical models
_vHandbooks, manuals, etc.
_2BUEsh
651 _2BUEsh
653 _bBUSADM
_cAugust2015
_cFebruary2016
700 1 _aLipton, Alexander,
_eeditor.
_939347
700 1 _aRennie, Andrew,
_eeditor.
942 _2ddc
999 _c20626
_d20598