Tuesday 24 July 2012

Introduction to the Mathematics of Finance Williams, R J

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Introduction to the Mathematics of Finance
Williams, R J
2011; 160 pp; Paperback; 180 × 240 mm; 978-0-8218-6882-9
For sale only in India,Pakistan,Nepal,Bhutan,Bangladesh,Sri Lanka,Maldives
Series: Indian Editions of AMS Titles
465.00
The modern subject of mathematical finance has undergone considerable development, both in theory and practice, since the seminal work of Black and Scholes appeared a third of a century ago. This book is intended as an introduction to some elements of the theory that will enable students and researchers to go on to read more advanced texts and research papers.
The book begins with the development of the basic ideas of hedging and pricing of European and American derivatives in the discrete (i.e., discrete time and discrete state) setting of binomial tree models. Then a general discrete finite market model is introduced, and the fundamental theorems of asset pricing are proved in this setting. Tools from probability such as conditional expectation, filtration, (super)martingale, equivalent martingale measure, and martingale representation are all used first in this simple discrete framework. This provides a bridge to the continuous (time and state) setting, which requires the additional concepts of Brownian motion and stochastic calculus. The simplest model in the continuous setting is the famous Black-Scholes model, for which pricing and hedging of European and American derivatives are developed. The book concludes with a description of the fundamental theorems for a continuous market model that generalizes the simple Black-Scholes model in several directions.

Table of Contents
Preface
Chapter 1. Financial Markets and Derivatives
Chapter 2. Binomial Model
Chapter 3. Finite Market Model
Chapter 4. Black-Scholes Model
Chapter 5. Multi-dimensional Black-Scholes Model
Appendix A. Conditional Expectation and Lp-Spaces 
Appendix B. Discrete Time Stochastic Processes 
Appendix C. Continuous Time Stochastic Processes 
Appendix D. Brownian Motion and Stochastic Integration
Bibliography 
Index 

About The Author
R J Williams, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA

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