风险和资产配置(英文版) [Risk and Asset Allocation]

风险和资产配置(英文版) [Risk and Asset Allocation] 下载 mobi epub pdf 电子书 2024


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发表于2024-11-09

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图书介绍

出版社: 世界图书出版公司
ISBN:9787510004926
版次:1
商品编码:10104488
包装:平装
外文名称:Risk and Asset Allocation
开本:24开
出版时间:2010-01-01
页数:532
正文语种:英语


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内容简介

《风险和资产配置(英文版)》是一部全面介绍风险与资产分配的统计教材。多变量估计的方法分析深入,包括非正态假设下的无参和极大似然估计,压缩理论、鲁棒以及一般的贝叶斯技巧。作者用独到的眼光讲述了资产分配,给出了该学科的精华。重点突出,包含了MATLAB数学工具软件,对于以数学为中心的投资行业来说该书是一本必选书。

内页插图

目录

Preface
Audience and style
Structure of the work
A guided tour by means of a simplistic example
Acknowledgments

Part Ⅰ The statistics of asset allocation
Univariate statistics
1.1 Building blocks
1.2 Summary statistics
1.2.1 Location
1.2.2 Dispersion
1.2.3 Higher-order statistics
1.2.4 Graphical representations
1.3 Taxonomy of distributions
1.3.1 Uniform distribution
1.3.2 Normal distribution
1.3.3 Cauchy distribution
1.3.4 Student t distribution
1.3.5 Lognormal distribution
1.3.6 Gamma distribution
1.3.7 Empirical distribution
1.T Technical appendix
1.E Exercises

2 Multivariate statistics
2.1 Building blocks
2.2 Factorization of a distribution
2.2.1 Marginal distribution
2.2.2 Copulas
2.3 Dependence
2.4 Shape summary statistics
2.4.1 Location
2.4.2 Dispersion
2.4.3 Location-dispersion ellipsoid
2.4.4 Higher-order statistics
2.5 Dependence summary statistics
2.5.1 Measures of dependence
2.5.2 Measures of concordance
2.5.3 Correlation
2.6 Taxonomy of distributions
2.6.1 Uniform distribution
2.6.2 Normal distribution
2.6.3 Student t distribution
2.6.4 Cauchy distribution
2.6.5 Log-distributions
2.6.6 Wishart distribution
2.6.7 Empirical distribution
2.6.8 Order statistics
2.7 Special classes of distributions
2.7.1 Elliptical distributions
2.7.2 Stable distributions
2.7.3 Infinitely divisible distributions
2.T Technical appendix
2.E Exercises

3 Modeling the market
3.1 The quest for invariance
3.1.1 Equities, commodities, exchange rates
3.1.2 Fixed-income market
3.1.3 Derivatives
3.2 Projection of the invariants to the investment horizon
3.3 From invariants to market prices
3.3.1 Raw securities
3.3.2 Derivatives
3.4 Dimension reduction
3.4.1 Explicit factors
3.4.2 Hidden factors
3.4.3 Explicit vs. hidden factors
3.4.4 Notable examples
3.4.5 A useful routine
3.5 Case study: modeling the swap market
3.5.1 The market invariants
3.5.2 Dimension reduction
3.5.3 The invariants at the investment horizon
3.5.4 From invariants to prices
3.T Technical appendix
3.E Exercises

Part Ⅱ Classical asset allocation
Estimating the distribution of the market invariants
4.1 Estimators
4.1.1 Definition
4.1.2 Evaluation
4.2 Nonparametric estimators
4.2.1 Location, dispersion and hidden factors
4.2.2 Explicit factors
4.2.3 Kernel estimators
4.3 Maximum likelihood estimators
4.3.1 Location, dispersion and hidden factors
4.3.2 Explicit factors
4.3.3 The normal case
4.4 Shrinkage estimators
4.4.1 Location
4.4.2 Dispersion and hidden factors
4.4.3 Explicit factors
4.5 Robustness
4.5.1 Measures of robustness
4.5.2 Robustness of previously introduced estimators
4.5.3 Robust estimators
4.6 Practical tips
4.6.1 Detection of outliers
4.6.2 Missing data
4.6.3 Weighted estimates
4.6.4 Overlapping data
4.6.5 Zero-mean invariants
4.6.6 Model-implied estimation
4.T Technical appendix
4.E Exercises

5 Evaluating allocations
5.1 Investors objectives
5.2 Stochastic dominance
5.3 Satisfaction
5.4 Certainty-equivalent (expected utility)
5.4.1 Properties
5.4.2 Building utility functions
5.4.3 Explicit dependence on allocation
5.4.4 Sensitivity analysis
5.5 Quantile (value at risk)
5.5.1 Properties
5.5.2 Explicit dependence on allocation
5.5.3 Sensitivity analysis
5.6 Coherent indices (expected shortfall)
5.6.1 Properties
5.6.2 Building coherent indices
5.6.3 Explicit dependence on allocation
5.6.4 Sensitivity analysis
5.T Technical appendix
5.E Exercises

6 Optimizing allocations
6.1 The general approach
6.1.1 Collecting information on the investor
6.1.2 Collecting information on the market
6.1.3 Computing the optimal allocation
6.2 Constrained optimization
6.2.1 Positive orthants: linear programming
6.2.2 Ice-cream cones: second-order cone programming
6.2.3 Semidefinite cones: semidefinite programming
6.3 The mean-variance approach
6.3.1 The geometry of allocation optimization
6.3.2 Dimension reduction: the mean-variance framework
6.3.3 Setting up the mean-variance optimization
6.3.4 Mean-variance in terms of returns
6.4 Analytical solutions of the mean-variance problem
6.4.1 Efficient frontier with affme constraints
6.4.2 Efficient frontier with linear constraints
6.4.3 Effects of correlations and other parameters
6.4.4 Effects of the market dimension
6.5 Pitfalls of the mean-variance framework
6.5.1 MV as an approximation
6.5.2 MV as an index of satisfaction
6.5.3 Quadratic programming and dual formulation
6.5.4 MV on returns: estimation versus optimization
6.5.5 MV on returns: investment at different horizons
6.6 Total-return versus benchmark allocation
6.7 Case study: allocation in stocks
6.7.1 Collecting information on the investor
6.7.2 Collecting information on the market
6.7.3 Computing the optimal allocation
6.T Technical appendix
6.E Exercises

Part Ⅲ Accounting for estiamation risk
Part Ⅳ Appendices

精彩书摘

The financial markets contain many sources of risk. When dealing with severalsources of risk at a time we cannot treat them separately: the joint structureof multi-dimensionai randomness contains a wealth of information that goesbeyond the juxtaposition of the information contained in each single variable.
In this chapter we discuss multivariate statistics. The structure of thischapter reflects that of Chapter 1: to ease the comprehension of the multi-variate case refer to the respective section in that chapter. For more on thissubject see also references such as Mardia, Kent, and Bibby (1979), Press(1982) and Morrison (2002).
In Section 2.1 we introduce the building blocks of multivariate distributionswhich are direct generalizations of the one-dimensional case. These include thethree equivalent representations of a distribution in terms of the probabilitydensity function, the characteristic function and the cumulative distributionfunction.
In Section 2.2 we discuss the factorization of a distribution into its purelyunivariate components, namely the marginal distributions, and its purely jointcomponent, namely the copula. To present copulas we use the leading exampleof vanilla options.
In Section 2.3 we introduce the concept of independence among randomvariables and the related concept of conditional distribution.
In Section 2.4 we discuss the location summary statistics of a distributionsuch as its expected value and its mode, and the dispersion summary statisticssuch as the covariance matrix and the modal dispersion. We detail the geo- metrical representations of these statistics in terms of the location-dispersionellipsoid, .and their probabilistic interpretations in terms of a multivariateversion of Chebyshevs inequality. We conclude introducing more summarystatistics such as the multivariate moments, which provide a deeper insightinto the shape of a multivariate distribution.

前言/序言

  In an asset allocation problem the investor, who can be the trader, or thefund manager, or the private investor, seeks the combination of securitiesthat best suit their needs in an uncertain environment. In order to determinethe optimum allocation, the investor needs to model, estimate, assess andmanage uncertainty.
  The most popular approach to asset allocation is the mean-variance frame-work pioneered by Markowitz, where the investor aims at maximizing theportfolios expected return for a given level of variance and a given set of investment constraints. Under a few assumptions it is possible to estimate themarket parameters that feed the model and then solve the ensuing optimization problem.
  More recently, measures of risk such as the value at risk or the expectedshortfall have found supporters in the financial community. These measuresemphasize the potential downside of an allocation more than its potential benefits. Therefore, they are better suited to handle asset allocation in modern,highly asymmetrical markets.
  All of the above approaches are highly intuitive. Paradoxically, this can bea drawback, in that one is tempted to rush to conclusions or implementations,without pondering the underlying assumptions.
  For instance, the term "mean-variance" hints at the identificati 风险和资产配置(英文版) [Risk and Asset Allocation] 下载 mobi epub pdf txt 电子书 格式

风险和资产配置(英文版) [Risk and Asset Allocation] mobi 下载 pdf 下载 pub 下载 txt 电子书 下载 2024

风险和资产配置(英文版) [Risk and Asset Allocation] 下载 mobi pdf epub txt 电子书 格式 2024

风险和资产配置(英文版) [Risk and Asset Allocation] 下载 mobi epub pdf 电子书
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用户评价

评分

从地域上来看,亚洲人与世界上其他国家民众的隐私态度存在着巨大的差别。中国人和日本人所表现出来的隐私观念要普遍比其他国家的人淡薄。对于大多数类别的个人数据,日本的受访者基本只有10%~30%认为属于隐私。即使各国受访者公认的最敏感的个人财务信息,也只有34%的日本人认为这是隐私。

评分

买人并持有策略是指在确定恰当的资产配置比例,构造了某个投资组合后,在诸如3—5年的适当持有期间内不改变资产配置状态,保持这种组合。买人并持有策略是消极型长期再平衡方式,适用于有长期计划水平并满足于战略性资产配置的投资者。

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内容不错,通俗易懂!

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买入并持有策略

评分

买入并持有策略

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我喜欢

评分

(3)资产配置规则能够客观地测度出哪一种资产类别已经失去市场的注意力,并引导投资者进入不受人关注的资产类别。

评分

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