出版日期:2005年01月
ISBN:9787040161656
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《衍生工具与风险管理》内容提要:
《衍生工具与风险管理》涵盖了金融衍生工具的基本内容以及相应的风险管理知识,主要介绍了期权、远期、期货、互换等基础性金融衍生工具的基本知识、市场制度、定价原理和市场运用策略,并针对目前世界上应用*广泛、*重要的一类衍生产品——利率衍生工具进行了深入浅出的分析和介绍,*后专门从定量和定性两个角度讨论了相应的风险管理问题。
作为一本在国外广受欢迎的金融工程教材,《衍生工具与风险管理》适合于金融、投资、财务管理等相关专业本科生、硕士生、MBA教学使用,可用于金融工程、衍生产品等课程,也非常适合作为金融工程、衍生产品和风险管理领域的培训教材,同时可供金融从业者和对金融领域有兴趣者自学使用,亦是一本**的可供查阅的市场手册。
《衍生工具与风险管理》图书目录:
Chapter 1
Introduction 1
Derivative Markets and Instruments 2
Options 2
Forward Contracts 3
Futures Contracts 3
Options on Futures 4
Swaps and Other Derivatives 4
The Underlying Asset 5
Some Important Concepts in Financial and Derivative
Markets 5
Risk Preference 5
Short Selling 5
Return and Risk 6
Market Efficiency and Theoretical Fair Value 6
Fundamental Linkages between Spot and Derivative
Markets 8
Arbitrage and the Law of One Price 8
The Storage Mechanism: Spreading Consumption across
Time 9
Delivery and Settlement 10
The Role of Derivative Markets 10
Risk Management 10
Price Discovery 11
Operational Advantages 11
Market Efficiency 12
Criticisms of Derivative Markets 12
Misuses of Derivatives 12
Derivatives and Your Career 13
Sources of Information on Derivatives 14
Summary 14
Further Reading 14
Questions and Problems 15
Chapter 2
The Structure of Options Markets 18
The Development of Options Markets 19
Call Options 20
Put Options 21
The Over-the-Counter Options Market 21
Organized Options Trading 23
Listing Requirements 23
Contract Size 23
Exercise Prices 24
Expiration Dates 24
Position and Exercise Limits 25
Options Exchanges and Trading Activity 26
Option Traders 27
The Market Maker 27
The Floor Broker 28
The Order Book Official 28
Other Option Trading Systems 28
Off-Floor Option Traders 29
The Mechanics of Trading 29
Placing an Opening Order 29
The Role of the Clearinghouse 30
Placing an Offsetting Order 31
Exercising an Option 32
Option Price Quotations 33
Types of Options 34
Stock Options 34
Index Options 35
Currency Options 36
Other Types of Traded Options 36
Real Options 37
Transaction Costs in Option Trading 38
Floor Trading and Clearing Fees 38
Commissions 38
Bid-Ask Spread 39
Other Transaction Costs 39
The Regulation of Options Markets 40
Summary 41
Further Reading 41
Questions and Problems 41
Appendix 2: Margin Requirements 43
Chapter 3
Principles of Option Pricing 45
Basic Notation and Terminology 46
Principles of Call Option Pricing 47
The Minimum Value of a Call 47
The Maximum Value of a Call 49
The Value of a Call at Expiration 49
The Effect of Time to Expiration 49
The Effect of Exercise Price 52
The Lower Bound of a European Call 55
American Call Versus European Call 58
The Early Exercise of American Calls on
Dividend-Paying Stocks 59
The Effect of Interest Rates 60
The Effect of Stock Volatility 60
Principles of Put Option Pricing 61
The Minimum Value of a Put 61
The Maximum Value of a Put 62
The Value of a Put at Expiration 63
The Effect of Time to Expiration 64
The Effect of Exercise Price 65
The Lower Bound of a European Put 67
American Put Versus European Put 70
The Early Exercise of American Puts 70
Put-Call Parity 70
The Effect of Interest Rates 73
The Effect of Stock Volatility 74
Summary 75
Further Reading 76
Questions and Problems 77
Appendix 3: The Dynamics of Option Boundary
Conditions: A Learning Exercise 80
Chapter 4
Option Pricing Models: The Binomial
Model 81
The One-Period Binomial Model 82
An Illustrative Example 85
A Hedge Portfolio 86
An Overpriced Call 87
An Undevpriced Call 87
The Two-Period Binomial Model 88
An Illustrative Example 91
A Hedge Portfolio 92
A Mispriced Call in the Two-Period World 94
Extensions of the Binomial Model 95
Pricing Put Options 95
American Puts and Early Exercise 97
Dividends, European Calls, American Calls, and
Exercise 98
Extending the Binomial Model to n Periods 103
The Behavior of the Binomial Model for a Large r,
Fixed Option Life 105
Alternative Specifications of the Binomial Model 1
SOFTWARE DEMONSTRATION 4.1
Calculating the Binomial Price with the Excel
Spreadsheet: bsbin3.xls 109
Summary 109
Further Reading 110
Questions and Problems 110
Chapter 5
Option Pricing Models: The Black-Scholes
Model 112
The Black-Scholes Model as the Limit of the Binomial
Model 113
The Assumptions of the Model 114
Stock Prices Behave Randomly and Evolve According to a
Lognormal Distribution 115
The Risk-Free Rate and Volatility of the Log Return on the
Stock Are Constant throughout the Option's Life 118
There Are No Taxes or Transaction Costs 119
The Stock Pays No Dividends 119
The Options Are European 120
A Nobel Formula 120
A NumericalExample 121
SOFTWARE DEMONSTRATION 5.1
Calculating the Black-Scholes Price with the Excel
Spreadsheet: bsbin3.xls 122
Characteristics of the Black-Scholes Formula 122
The Variables in the Black-Scholes Model 126
The Stock Price 126
The Exercise Price 131
The Risk-Free Rate 132
The Volatility or Standard Deviation 134
The Time to Expiration 136
The Black-Scholes Model When the Stock Pays
Dividends 138
Known Discrete Dividends 138
Known Continuous Dividend Yield 139
The Black-Scholes Model and Some Insights into
American Call Options 141
Estimating the Volatility 142
Historical Volatility 142
SOFTWARE DEMONSTRATION 5.2
Calculating the Historical Volatility with the Excel
Spreadsheet: hisv2.xls 143
Implied Volatility 143
Put Option Pricing Models 147
Managing the Risk of Options 150
Summary 155
Further Reading 156
Questions and Problems 157
Appendix 5: The BSBWIN2.2 Windows Software 160
Chapter 6
Basic Option Strategies 161
Terminology and Notation 162
The Profit Equations 162
Different Holding Periods 164
Assumptions 165
Stock Transactions 165
Buy Stock 165
Sell Short Stock 165
Call Option Transactions 166
Buy a Call 166
Write a Call 170
Put Option Transactions 173
Buy a Put 173
Write a Put 175
Calls and Stock: The Covered Call 178
Some C, enal Considerations with Covered Calls 183
Puts and Stock: The Protective Put 184
Synthetic Puts and Calls 187
SOFTWARE DEMONSTRATION 6.1
Analyzing Option Strategies with the Excel Spreadsheet:
stratlyz3.xls 190
Summary 190
Questions and Problems 191
Chapter 7
The Structure of Forward and Futures
Markets 194
The Development of Forward and Futures Markets 195
Chicago Futures Markets 195
The Development of Financial Futures 196
The Development of Options on Futures Markets 197
The Parallel Development of Over-the-Connter Markets 198
The Over-the-Counter Forward Market 198
Organized Futures Trading 199
Contract Development 199
Contract Terms and Conditions 200
Delivery Terms 201
Daily Price Limits and Trading Halts 201
Other Exchange Responsibilities 202
Futures Exchanges 202
Futures Traders 204
General Classes of Futures Traders 204
Classification by Trading Strategy 204
Classification by Trading Style 204
Off-Floor Futures Traders 206
Forward Market Traders 206
The Mechanics of Futures Trading 206
Placing an Order 207
The Role of the Clearinghouse 207
Daily Settlement 208
Delivery and Cash Settlement 211
Futures Price Quotations 212
Types of Futures Contracts 213
Agricultural Commodities 213
Natural Resources 213
Miscellaneous Commodities 214
Foreign Currencies 214
Treasury Bills and Eurodollars 214
Treasury Notes and Bonds 214
Equities 215
Managed Funds 215
Hedge Funds 217
Options on Futures 218
Transaction Costs in Forward and Futures Trading 218
Commissions 218
Bid-Ask Spread 218
Delivery Costs 219
The Regulation of Futures and Forward Markets 219
Summary 220
Further Reading 221
Questions and Problems 221
Chapter 8
Prin@les of Pricing Forwards, Futures, and Options on Futures 223
Properties of Forward and Futures Prices 224
The Concept of Price versus Value 224
The Value of a Forward Contract 224
The Value of a Futures Contract 226
Forward versus Futures Prices 228
A Forward and Futures Pricing Model 230
Spot Prices, Risk Premiums, and the Cost of Carry for
Generic Assets 230
The Theoretical Fair Price 232
Futures Prices and Risk Premia 237
Forward and Futures Pricing When the Underlying
Generates Cash Flows 240
Another Look at Valuation of Forward Contracts 243
Pricing Foreign Currency Forward and Futures Contracts:
Interest Rate Parity 244
Prices of Futures Contracts of Different Expirations 246
Put-Call-Forward~Futures Parity 247
Pricing Options on Futures 248
The Intrinsic Value of an American Option on Futures 249
The Lower Bound of a European Option on Futures 249
Put-Call Parity of Options on Futures 251
Early Exercise of Call and Put Options on Futures 252
The Black Option on Futures Pricing Model 253
Summary 257
Further Reading 258
Questions and Problems 259
Chapter 9
Forward and Futures Hedging Strategies 260
Hedging Concepts 261
Short Hedge and Long Hedge 261
The Basis 261
Some Risks of Hedging 264
Contract Choice 265
Margin Requirements and Marking to Market 267
Determination of the Hedge Ratio 269
Minimum Variance Hedge Ratio 269
Price Sensitivity Hedge Ratio 271
Stock Index Futures Hedging 273
Tailing the Hedge 274
Hedging Strategies 274
Foreign Currency Hedges 275
Intermediate- and Long-Term Interest Rate Hedges 277
Stock Market Hedges 280
Summary 284
Further Reading 285
Questions and Problems 285
Appendix 9: Derivation of the Hedge Ratio 288
Minimum Variance Hedge Ratio 288
Price Sensitivit Hedge Ratio 288
Chapter 10
Swaps 290
Interest Rate Swaps 292
The Structure of a Typical Interest Rate Swap 292
The Pricing and Valuation of Interest Rate Swaps 295
Interest Rate Swap Strategies 301
Currency Swaps 303
The Structure of a Typical Currency Swap 303
The Pricing and Valuation of Currency Swaps 305
Currency Swap Strategies 309
Equity Swaps 312
The Structure of a Typical Equity Swap 313
Pricing and Valuation of Equity Swaps 314
Equity Swap Strategies 318
Some Final Words about Swaps 320
Summary 321
Further Reading 321
Questions and Problems 322
Chapter 11
Interest Rate Forwards and Options 326
Forward Rate Agreements 327
The Structure and Use of a Typical FRA 327
The Pricing and Valuation of FRAs 329
Applications of FRAs 331
Interest Rate Options 333
The Structure and Use of a Typical lnterest Rate
Option 334
Pricing and Valuation of Interest Rate Options 335
Interest Rate Option Strategies 336
Interest Rate Caps, bToors, and Collars 341
Interest Rate Options, FRAs, and Swaps 34 7
Summary 348
Further Reading 348
Questions and Problems 349
Chapter 12
Financial Risk Management Techniques
and Applications 352
Why Practice Risk Management? 353
The Impetus for Risk Management 353
The Benefits of Risk Management 353
Managing Market Risk 355
Delta Hedging 356
Gamma Hedging 358
Vega Hedging 360
Value at Risk (VAR) 362
Benefits and Criticisms of VAR 368
Managing Credit Risk 369
Option Pricing Theory and Credit Risk 369
The Credit Risk of Derivatives 371
Netting 374
Credit Derivatives 376
Other Types of Risks 378
Summary 382
Further Reading 382
Questions and Problems 383
Appendix 12: Monte Carlo Simulation 385
Chapter 13
Managing Risk in an Organization 388
The Structure of the Risk Management Industry 389
End Users 389
Dealers 390
Other Participants in the Risk Management Industry 391
Organizing the Risk Management Function in a Company 392
Risk Management Accounting 395
Fair Value Hedges 396
Cash Flow Hedges 397
Foreign Investment Hedges 399
Speculation 399
Some Problems in the Application of FAS 133 399
Disclosure 400
Risk Management Industry Standards 400
Responsibilities of Senior Management 406
Summary 407
Further Reading 407
Questions and Problems 408
……
《衍生工具与风险管理》文章节选:
There are plenty of examples of options in everyday life. Historians and archaeologistshave even discovered primitive options. Though these arrangements may resemblemodem options, the current system of options markets traces its origins to thenineteenth century, when puts and calls were offered on shares of stock. Little is knownabout the options world of the 1800s other than that it was fraught with corruption.
Then, in the early 1900s, a group of firms calling itself the Put and Call Brokersand Dealers Association created an options market. If someone wanted to buy anoption, a member of the association would find a seller willing to write it. If themember firm could not find a writer, it would write the option itself. Thus, a memberfirm could be either a broker——one who matches buyer and seller——or a dealer——one who actually takes a position in the transaction.
Although this over-the-counter options market was viable, it suffered from severaldeficiencies. First, it did not provide the option holder the opportunity to sell theoption to someone else before it expired. Options were designed to be held all theway to expiration, whereupon they were either exercised or allowed to expire. Thus,an option contract had little or no liquidity. Second, the writer's performance wasguaranteed only by the broker-dealer firm. If the writer or the Put and Call Brokersand Dealers Association member firm went bankrupt, the option holder was simplyout of luck.1 Third, the cost of transacting was relatively high, due partly to the firsttwo problems.
In 1973, a revolutionary change occurred in the options world. The Chicago Boardof Trade, the world's oldest and largest exchange for the trading of commodity futurescontracts, organized an exchange exclusively for trading options on stocks. Theexchange was named the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE). It opened its doorsfor call option trading on April 26, 1973, and the first puts were added in June 1977.
The CB
…… 自教育部在《关于加强高等学校本科教学工作提高教学质量的若干意见》【教高(2001)4号】中提出双语教学的要求后,各地高校相继开设了一系列双语教学课程。这对提高学生的学科和外文水平,开阔国际视野,培养创新型人才起到了重要的作用;一大批教师也逐渐熟悉了外文授课,自身的教学水平和能力得到较大提高,具备国际学术思维的中青年教师脱颖而出。同时,经过近几年的双语教学实践,国外原版教材量大、逻辑不够清晰、疏离中国现实等问题也影响了双语教学的效果。因此,对外版教材进行本土化的精简改编,使之更加适合我国的双语教学已提上教材建设日程。
为了满足高等学校经济管理类双语课程本土化教学的需要,在教育部高等教育司的指导和支持下,高等教育出版社同Thomson Leaming等国外**出版公司通力合作,在国内**推出了金融、会计、经济学等专业的英文原版改编教材。本套教材的遴选、改编和出版严格遵循了以下几个原则:
1.择优选取权威的新版本。在各专业选书论证会上,我们要求入选改编的教材不仅是在国际上多次再版的经典之作的*新版本,而且是近年来已在国内被**的**教材。
2.改编后的教材力求内容规范简明,逻辑更加清晰,语言原汁原味,适合中国的双语教学。选择的改编人既熟悉原版教材内容又具有本书或本门课程双语教学的经验;在改编过程中,高等教育出版社组织了知名专家学者召开了数次改编和审稿会议,改编稿征求了众多教师的意见。
3.改编后的教材配有较丰富的辅助教学支持资源,教师可在网上免费获取。同时,改编后的教材厚度适中,定价标准较低。
由于原作者所处**的政治、经济和文化背景等与我国不同,对书中所持观点,敬请广大读者在阅读过程中注意加以分析和鉴别。
此次英文改编教材的出版,得到了很多专家学者的支持和帮助,在此深表谢意!我们期待这批英文改编教材的出版能对我国经济管理类专业的教学能有所帮助,欢迎广大读者给我们提出宝贵的意见和建议。
《衍生工具与风险管理》作者介绍:
Don M.ctlance,美国路易斯安那州立大学金融学教授,主要研究方向为金融衍生产品和风险管理。曾在美国东南部的一家大银行就职,曾任美国Virginiaa Tech学院Pamplin商学院首任金融风险管理联合教授,拥有cFA资格。由于其实际从业经历和学术背景,cIlance教授无论在**学术刊物还是在职业期刊上均有大量论文发表,并在业界咨询、学术顾问等方面具有丰富经验。
改编及审校者简介
陈蓉,金融学博士,现任教于厦门大学金融系,主要研究方向为金融工程和固定收益证券,同时在厦门东南融通系统工程有限公司博士后工作站从事“中国结构化衍生产品设计、定价与风险管理研究”的博士后课题研究。曾在《经济学家》、《中国经济问题》、《证券市场导报》等国内公开刊物发表十多篇论文。
郑振龙,金融学博士,美国加州大学洛杉矶分校富布莱特研究学者,现任厦门大学经济学院副院长、金融工程教授、博士生导师,中国金融学年会主席、中国金融学会金融工程专业委员会常务委员、福建省金融学会副会长。在国内外刊物上公开发表了百余篇学术论文,出版了25部(含合作)著、编、译著作。