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基本説明
New in paperback. Hardcover was published in 2002. A YBP Library Services Bestselling Professional Titles, 3rd quarter 2002. The theory of Value at Risk (VaR) won the Nobel Prize in economics for Robert Merton. This collection of papers addresses the weaknesses of VaR and suggests means of circumventing them.
Full Description
The use of derivative products in risk management has spread from commodities, stocks and fixed income items, to such virtual commodities as energy, weather and bandwidth. All this can give rise to so-called volatility and there has been a consequent development in formal risk management techniques to cover all types of risk: market, credit, liquidity, etc. One of these techniques, Value at Risk, was developed specifically to help manage market risk over short periods. Its success led, somewhat controversially, to its take up and extension to credit risk over longer time-scales. This extension, ultimately not successful, led to the collapse of a number of institutions. The present book, which was originally published in 2002, by some of the leading figures in risk management, examines the complex issues that concern the stability of the global financial system by presenting a mix of theory and practice.
Contents
Introduction; 1. Quantifying the risks of trading: comparing and contrasting the measurement of market risk (VaR) and counterparty exposure Evan Picoult; 2. Value at risk analysis of a leveraged swap Sanjay Srivastava; 3. Stress testing in a Value at Risk framework Paul H. Kupiec; 4. Dynamic portfolio replication using stochastic programming M. A. H. Dempster and G. W. P. Thompson; 5. Credit and interest rate risk William Perraudin, Rudiger Kiesel and Alex Taylor; 6. Coherent measures of risk Philippe Artzner, Freddy Delbaen, Jean-Marc Eber and David Heath; 7. Correlation and dependency in risk management: properties and pitfalls Paul Embrechts, Alexander J. McNeil and Daniel Straumann; 8. Measuring risk with extreme value theory Richard L. Smith; 9. Extremes in Operational Risk management M. N. Kyriacou and E. A. Medova.