
Relying on the existence, in a complete market, of a pricing kernel, this book covers the pricing of assets, derivatives, and bonds in a discrete time, complete markets framework. It is primarily aimed at advanced Masters and PhD students in finance. -- Covers asset pricing in a single period model, deriving a simple complete market pricing model and using Stein's lemma to derive a version of the Capital Asset Pricing Model. -- Looks more deeply into some of the utility determinants of the pricing kernel, investigating in particular the effect of non-marketable background risks on the shape of the pricing kernel. -- Derives the prices of European-style contingent claims, in particular call options, in a one-period model; derives the Black-Scholes model assuming a lognormal distribution for the asset and a pricing kernel with constant elasticity, and emphasizes the idea of a risk-neutral valuation relationship between the price of a contingent claim on an asset and the underlying asset price. -- Extends the analysis to contingent claims on assets with non-lognormal distributions and considers the pricing of claims when risk-neutral valuation relationships do not exist. -- Expands the treatment of asset pricing to a multi-period economy, deriving prices in a rational expectations equilibrium. -- Uses the rational expectations framework to analyse the pricing of forward and futures contracts on assets and derivatives. -- Analyses the pricing of bonds given stochastic interest rates, and then uses this methodology to model the drift of forward rates, and as a special case the drift of the forward London Interbank Offer Rate in the LIBOR Market Model.
This text investigates the mechanics of asset pricing within a discrete time, complete markets framework by utilizing the pricing kernel as the central analytical tool. Authors Richard C. Stapleton and Ser-Huang Poon provide a rigorous academic treatment of financial valuation, drawing upon utility theory and rational expectations equilibrium to explain the pricing of assets, derivatives, and bonds. The book serves as a technical resource for advanced students, bridging the gap between basic single-period models and complex multi-period economic structures.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and academics identify this work as a specialized text for graduate-level finance curricula. Readers frequently note the high level of mathematical density and the technical rigor required to follow the authors' derivations of pricing kernels and equilibrium models.
Page Count:
152
Publication Date:
2005-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0191533890
ISBN-13:
9780191533891
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!