The Handbook Of Convertibles


The Handbook Of Convertibles pdf

Download The Handbook Of Convertibles PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get The Handbook Of Convertibles book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

The Handbook of Convertibles


The Handbook of Convertibles

Author: Simon R. McGuire

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 1990-01-01


DOWNLOAD





The Handbook of Convertibles


The Handbook of Convertibles

Author: Simon R. McGuire

language: en

Publisher: New York : New York Institute of Finance

Release Date: 1991


DOWNLOAD





Extremely practical and comprehensive reference to convertible securities. Provides actual case examples walking readers through the calculations involved.

The Handbook of Convertible Bonds


The Handbook of Convertible Bonds

Author: Jan De Spiegeleer

language: en

Publisher: Wiley

Release Date: 2011-03-14


DOWNLOAD





This is a complete guide to the pricing and risk management of convertible bond portfolios. Convertible bonds can be complex because they have both equity and debt like features and new market entrants will usually find that they have either a knowledge of fixed income mathematics or of equity derivatives and therefore have no idea how to incorporate credit and equity together into their existing pricing tools. Part I of the book covers the impact that the 2008 credit crunch has had on the markets, it then shows how to build up a convertible bond and introduces the reader to the traditional convertible vocabulary of yield to put, premium, conversion ratio, delta, gamma, vega and parity. The market of stock borrowing and lending will also be covered in detail. Using an intuitive approach based on the Jensen inequality, the authors will also show the advantages of using a hybrid to add value - pre 2008, many investors labelled convertible bonds as 'investing with no downside', there are of course plenty of 2008 examples to prove that they were wrong. The authors then go onto give a complete explanation of the different features that can be embedded in convertible bond. Part II shows readers how to price convertibles. It covers the different parameters used in valuation models: credit spreads, volatility, interest rates and borrow fees and Maturity. Part III covers investment strategies for equity, fixed income and hedge fund investors and includes dynamic hedging and convertible arbitrage. Part IV explains the all important risk management part of the process in detail. This is a highly practical book, all products priced are real world examples and numerical examples are not limited to hypothetical convertibles. It is a must read for anyone wanting to safely get into this highly liquid, high return market.