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9780195169621

The Oxford Guide to Financial Modeling Applications for Capital Markets, Corporate Finance, Risk Management and Financial Institutions

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780195169621

  • ISBN10:

    019516962X

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2004-01-15
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

Summary

The Oxford Guide to Financial Modeling is accompanied by a companion web site that serves as an interactive workbook designed specifically for the book. This site is simple to use yet exceedingly robust with regard to its technological efficiency and purposeful usability. It is designed to further enhance understanding of the use and applications of the models referred to in the book and it is accessible free of charge at www.thomasho.com. This on-line workbook and resource tool contains more than 95 downloadable Excel models. The models provide clear expositions of the mathematical formulations and can be used along with the book. The companion web site is rich with a plethora of research and analytic tools designed for "doing finance" on-line.

Author Biography


Thomas S.Y. Ho,is president of Thomas Ho Company. Previously he was Executive Vice President of BARRA, Inc. He founded GAT, a financial software company that had over 200 institutional clients globally. He served as a professor in finance at New York University's Stern School of Business. He is an associate editor of the Journal of Investment Management, International Journal of Theoretical and Applied Finance, and Journal of Derivatives. He received his Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Pennsylvania. Sang Bin Lee, is a professor of finance at the School of Busines Administration, Hangyang University in Seoul, Korea and President of the Korean Securities Association. Previously, he was an assistant director Ministry of Finance, Korea and an Independent Director and a member of Risk Management Committee, Hana Bank. Currently, he serves as a member of Primary Dealers Screening Committee, Ministry of Finance, Korea and a member of Unfair Trading Examination Committee, Financial Supervisory Service, Korea. Professor Lee received his Ph.D. in Finance from New York University's Stern School of Business. Dr. Ho and Professor Lee have published extensively in major journals. They are the authors of the Ho-Lee Model, the first and widely cited arbitrage-free interest rate model.

Table of Contents

Model List xxiii
PART I. DERIVATIVES VALUATION
1. Introduction: Discounted Cash Flow Method
3(13)
1.1 Examples of Financial Issues
3(3)
1.2 Financial Models
6(3)
1.3 Basics of Modeling: Present Value and Measures of Risk
9(5)
1.4 Summary
14(2)
2. Equity Market: The Capital Asset Pricing Model
16(27)
2.1 Real and Financial Sectors
17(1)
2.2 Stocks and Stock Markets
18(4)
2.3 Perfect Capital Market
22(2)
2.4 Efficient Capital Market Hypothesis
24(1)
2.5 Diversification
25(4)
2.6 Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
29(2)
2.7 Beta-The Systematic Risk
31(2)
2.8 The Stock Model-Dividend Discount Model
33(2)
2.9 An Application of the Capital Asset Pricing Model in Investment Services
35(1)
2.10 Empirical Tests of the Capital Asset Pricing Model
35(2)
2.11 Summary
37(1)
Appendix A. Expectations and Standard Deviations
37(1)
Appendix B. A Summary of the CAPM
38(5)
3. Bond Markets: The Bond Model
43(37)
3.1 Bond Mathematics
44(2)
3.2 Bonds and Bond Markets
46(2)
3.3 Swap Markets
48(1)
3.4 Economics of the Yield Curve
49(4)
3.5 The Bond Model
53(3)
3.6 Forward Prices and Forward Rates
56(6)
3.7 Bond Analysis
62(8)
3.8 Applications of the Bond Analytics
70(3)
3.9 Law of One Price: An Arbitrage Trade and Fair Value Analysis
73(1)
3.10 Summary
74(1)
Appendix A. Taylor Expansion
75(1)
Appendix B. The Derivation of Macaulay Duration and Convexity
76(1)
Appendix C. Duration and Convexity in Measuring Price Sensitivity
77(3)
4. Equity Options: the Black-Scholes Model
80(43)
4.1 Description of an Option
80(2)
4.2 Institutional Framework
82(1)
4.3 Put-Call Parity
83(2)
4.4 The Main Insight of the Black-Scholes Model
85(7)
4.5 Valuation Methods
92(4)
4.6 Relationships of Risk-Neutral and Market Binomial Lattices
96(2)
4.7 Option Behavior and the Sensitivity Analysis
98(2)
4.8 Extensions of the Black-Scholes Model
100(2)
4.9 Option Pricing Procedure and Analytic Framework
102(1)
4.10 Applications of Option Models
103(3)
4.11 Accounting for Employee Stock Options
106(1)
4.12 Intuitive Explanations of the Behavior of an Equity Option
107(1)
4.13 Summary
108(1)
Appendix A. Derivation of the Black-Scholes Continuous Time Model Using Different Numeraires
109(4)
Appendix B. The Relationship Between the Time Decay and the Gamma of a Delta-Neutral Portfolio
113(1)
Appendix C. Pathwise Valuation
114(1)
Appendix D. Derivation of Discrete Time Parameters
115(1)
Appendix E. Monte Carlo Simulation and Finite Difference Method
116(7)
5. Interest Rate Derivatives: Interest Rate Models
123(49)
5.1 Interest Rate Movements: Historical Experiences
124(5)
5.2 The Three-Factor Yield Curve Movement Model
129(3)
5.3 Equilibrium Models
132(4)
5.4 Arbitrage-Free Models
136(20)
5.5 A Comparison of Models
156(1)
5.6 Generalizations of Interest Rate Models
157(6)
5.7 Summary
163(1)
Appendix A. Yield Curve Movements Represented by the Principal Components
164(1)
Appendix B. Derivation of Ho Lee, Extended Ho Lee, and Ho Lee Two-Factor Models
164(8)
6. Implied Volatility Surface: Calibrating the Models
172(42)
6.1 Implied Volatility Surface and Benchmark Securities
173(2)
6.2 Price Quotes of Benchmark Securities
175(7)
6.3 Valuation of Interest Rate Derivatives Using Market Benchmark Prices
182(3)
6.4 Calibration of the Black Derman-Toy Model
185(1)
6.5 Calibration of the Ho-Lee Models
186(2)
6.6 Calibration of the Longstaff-Santa-Clara-Schwartz "String" Model
188(5)
6.7 Calibration of the Brace-Gatarek Musiela/Jamshidian Model (the LIBOR Market Model)
193(2)
6.8 Comparing the Black Models and the Interest Rate Models
195(5)
6.9 Applications of Interest Rate Models
200(3)
6.10 Key Rate Duration and Dynamic Hedging
203(4)
6.11 Pathwise Valuation and Decomposition of an Option
207(2)
6.12 Intuitive Explanation of the Bond Option Valuation
209(1)
6.13 Lecture on Convexity
210(1)
6.14 Summary
211(3)
7. Exotic Options: Bellman's Optimization, the Filtration Model, and the n-Factor Model
214(45)
7.1 Options with Alternative Payoffs at Expiration
215(1)
7.2 Options with Boundary Conditions
216(2)
7.3 Options with the Early Exercise Feature (American) and the Bellman Optimization
218(5)
7.4 Compound Options
223(2)
7.5 Options with Look-back Features (Asian) and the Filtration Model
225(7)
7.6 Choosey Option
232(1)
7.7 Multiple Risk Sources
233(5)
7.8 Constant Maturity Swap
238(2)
7.9 Interest Rate Spread Option
240(2)
7.10 Options on Forward/Futures Contracts
242(1)
7.11 Commodity Options
243(4)
7.12 An Overview of the Valuation Framework
247(1)
7.13 Summary
248(1)
Appendix A. Optimal Early Exercise Using Simulations
249(1)
Appendix B. N-Factor Lattice Model
249(3)
Appendix C. A Numerical Example of Dynamic Programming
252(7)
PART II. CORPORATE LIABILITIES
8. Investment Grade Corporate Bonds: Option Adjusted Spreads
259(39)
8.1 Describing a Corporate Bond
260(5)
8.2 Valuation of a Bond
265(9)
8.3 Numerical Examples
274(6)
8.4 Liquidity (Marketability) Spread
280(3)
8.5 Credit Scoring Approaches
283(1)
8.6 Bond Analysis
284(2)
8.7 Numerical Example: Valuing a Eurobond Issue
286(2)
8.8 Applications of Bond Analytics
288(2)
8.9 Explaining the Concept of the Arbitrage-free Condition on a Solemn Occasion
290(1)
8.10 Summary
290(2)
Appendix. Callable Bond and Sinking Fund Bond Pricing
292(6)
9. High Yield Corporate Bonds: The Structural Models
298(34)
9.1 An Example of a High-Yield Bond
299(4)
9.2 Institutional Framework of Bankruptcy and Bankruptcy Proceedings
303(3)
9.3 The Fisher Model
306(1)
9.4 An Actuarial Model
306(2)
9.5 Historical Experience and Estimation of the Parameters of Default Models
308(4)
9.6 The Reduced Form Models
312(1)
9.7 The Structural Model
313(4)
9.8 Valuation of a Debt Package Using a Compound Option Model
317(4)
9.9 Empirical Evidence
321(1)
9.10 A Review of the High Yield Bond Models
322(1)
9.11 Analysis of the McLeod USA Bond
323(1)
9.12 Analysis of Credit Risk
324(3)
9.13 Summary
327(5)
10. Convertibles, MBS/CMO, and Other Bonds: The Behavioral Models
332(34)
10.1 Convertible Bonds
333(8)
10.2 Mortgage-Backed Securities (Pass-through Certificates)
341(8)
10.3 Collateralized Mortgage Obligations (CMO)
349(3)
10.4 Other Bonds
352(4)
10.5 Credit Derivatives
356(2)
10.6 Managing a CMO Portfolio
358(5)
10.7 Summary
363(3)
11. Financial Institutions' Liabilities: Required Option Adjusted Spread
366(47)
11.1 Balance Sheet Analysis-Book Value
367(1)
11.2 Fair Values
368(6)
11.3 Liability Modeling
374(2)
11.4 Bank Liabilities
376(4)
11.5 Property and Casualty Insurance
380(5)
11.6 Life Insurance Products
385(19)
11.7 Pension Liabilities
404(2)
11.8 Applications of the Financial Models to Liability Management
406(1)
11.9 'Not If, But When"
407(1)
11.10 Summary
408(5)
PART III. CORPORATE FINANCE
12. Valuation of a Firm: The Business Model
413(39)
12.1 Descriptions of a Firm
414(3)
12.2 Traditional Firm Valuation Methodologies
417(2)
12.3 Corporate Financial Decisions and Firm Value Maximization
419(2)
12.4 Miller-Modigliani Theories
421(7)
12.5 Free Cash Flow Discount Model
428(2)
12.6 Business Model
430(10)
12.7 Implications of the Valuation Model
440(1)
12.8 Analyses of the Business Model
441(1)
12.9 From the Senior Management Perspective
442(1)
12.10 Summary
443(1)
Appendix A. The MM Propositions
444(2)
Appendix B. The Miller Model
446(6)
13. Strategic Value of a Firm: Real Options
452(41)
13.1 Characteristics of a Growth Company An Example of Real Options
453(1)
13.2 Salient Features of Real Options
454(3)
13.3 Examples of Real Options in Capital Budgeting
457(4)
13.4 Examples of Businesses with Embedded Options
461(2)
13.5 Strategic Value of a Firm
463(2)
13.6 Analysis of the Real Option Value
465(2)
13.7 A Business Model with Embedded Options: Starbucks Coffee Japan
467(3)
13.8 A Business Model Approach and the Free Cash Flow Discounting Approach-A Comparison
470(1)
13.9 Empirical Implications of the Business Model
471(4)
13.10 Implications of the Business Model
475(4)
13.11 Empirical Research on Real Options
479(1)
13.12 What is Financial Modeling to Senior Management?
479(1)
13.13 Summary
480(1)
Appendix. The Business Model
481(12)
14. Optimal Corporate Financial Decisions: Corporate Model
493(32)
14.1 Corporate Financial Planning-the DFA Approach
494(3)
14.2 Extensions of the MM Theory
497(3)
14.3 Empirical Evidence on the MM Theory and Its Extensions
500(4)
14.4 The Corporate Model
504(2)
14.5 Specifications of the Corporate Model
506(6)
14.6 A Comparison with Previous Research
512(1)
14.7 New Perspectives in Viewing Firms as Contingent Claims
513(3)
14.8 Principles of Risk Management
516(1)
14.9 Summary
517(1)
Appendix. The Firm Model
518(7)
15. Risk Management
525(40)
15.1 Risk Measurement-Value at Risk
526(2)
15.2 Market Risk
528(1)
15.3 Delta Normal Methodology
529(6)
15.4 Historical Simulation Methodology
535(2)
15.5 Monte Carlo Simulation Methodology
537(1)
15.6 Extreme Value Theory
538(2)
15.7 Credit Risk
540(6)
15.8 Risk Reporting
546(2)
15.9 Risk Monitoring
548(1)
15.10 Risk Management
549(4)
15.11 Boardroom with a View-The Coffin story
553(1)
15.12 Summary
554(1)
Appendix A. Selected Historical Financial Losses
554(5)
Appendix B. Lessons Learned from the Historical Financial Losses
559(6)
16. Financial Institutions: Applications of Financial Models
565(41)
16.1 An Overview of the Financial Sector
566(3)
16.2 Organization and the Business Model of a Financial Institution
569(3)
16.3 Financial Disclosures on Valuation
572(3)
16.4 Risk Management
575(1)
16.5 Capital Allocation and Risk Adjusted Performance Measures
576(2)
16.6 Financial Modeling of a Financial Institution
578(14)
16.7 Applications: Asset and Liability Management
592(2)
16.8 Regulatory Issues
594(5)
16.9 Summary
599(1)
Appendix A. What Actions Have Commercial Banks Taken?
600(2)
Appendix B. Capital Requirements and Risk-based Capital
602(4)
17. Structured Finance: Foreign Exchange Models
606(14)
17.1 Background
606(1)
17.2 Economics of the Structure
607(1)
17.3 Deal Structure
608(3)
17.4 Pricing
611(3)
17.5 Simulations
614(1)
17.6 VaR Calculation
615(1)
17.7 Remarks
616(1)
17.8 Concluding Remarks on Financial Modeling
617(1)
Appendix A. Total Return Swap Terms and Conditions as of January 29, 1997
618(1)
Appendix B. Indonesian Rupiah-Linked Notes Final Terms and Conditions
618(1)
Appendix C. The Put-Call Parity
619(1)
18. Concluding Thoughts
620(13)
18.1 Conceptual Development of Financial Models
621(1)
18.2 Overview of Valuation Models
622(2)
18.3 Applications of the Financial Models
624(3)
18.4 Financial Modeling as a Process
627(1)
18.5 Looking into the Future
628(3)
18.6 The World of Contingent Claims
631(2)
19. Technical Matters: Market Model and Binomial Lattices
633(48)
19.1 Building a Market Model in a Binomial Lattice
634(13)
19.2 A General Approach to Valuation
647(13)
19.3 Comparison of the Option Derivation Between Discrete Time and Continuous Time
660(9)
Appendix A. Continuous Time Versions of the Ho Lee Models
669(5)
Appendix B. Summary of Continuous Time Interest Rate Models
674(3)
Appendix C. Recombining Lattice
677(4)
Glossary of Notations 681(6)
Glossary of Terms 687(18)
Index 705

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