Modern Pricing of Interest-Rate Derivatives: The LIBOR Market Model and Beyond
By (Author) Riccardo Rebonato
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
3rd February 2003
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Investment and securities
332.6323
Hardback
488
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
851g
In recent years, interest-rate modelling has developed rapidly in terms of both practice and theory. The academic and practitioners' communities, however, have not always communicated as productively as would have been desirable. As a result, their research programmes have often developed with little constructive interference. In this book, Ricardo Rebonato draws on his academic and professional experience, straddling both sides of the divide to bring together and build on what theory and trading have to offer. Rebonato begins by presenting the conceptual foundations for the application of the LIBOR market model to the pricing of interest-rate derivatives. Next he treats in great detail the calibration of this model to market prices, asking how possible and advisable it is to enforce a simultaneous fitting to several market observables. He does so with an eye not only to mathematical feasibility but also to financial justification, while devoting special scrutiny to the implications of market incompleteness. Much of the book concerns an original extension of the LIBOR market model, devised to account for implied volatility smiles. This is done by introducing a stochastic-volatility
"Rebonato's writing style is probably the most elegant I have ever seen in a quantitative finance book. His ideas are conveyed in a brief and clear manner... I thoroughly enjoyed this book since it allowed me to discover a whole new world in a fast and painless fashion. I would therefore recommend it to everyone who has any interest in the fascinating universe of fixed-income derivatives."--Alireza Javaheri, Quantitative Finance
Riccardo Rebonato is Head of Group Market Risk and Head of the Quantitative Research Centre (QUARC) for the Royal Bank of Scotland Group. He is also a Visiting Lecturer at Oxford University's Mathematical Institute, where he teaches for the MSC/Diploma in Mathematical Finance. His books include "Interest-Rate Option Models" and "Volatility and Correlation in Option Pricing".