Selected Product: | Options, Futures and Other Derivatives (6th Edition) Hardcover Edition: 6 Author: John C. Hull Publisher: Prentice Hall Release Date: 2005-06-20 ISBN-10: 0131499084 ISBN-13: 9780131499089 List Price: $197.33 Average Customer Rating: | | Option Volatility & Pricing: Advanced Trading Strategies and Techniques ISBN-10: 155738486X ISBN-13: 9781557384867 List Price:$65.00 Heard on the Street: Quantitative Questions from Wall Street Job Interviews ISBN-10: 0970055269 ISBN-13: 9780970055262 List Price:$50.00 Stochastic Calculus for Finance I: The Binomial Asset Pricing Model (Springer Finance) ISBN-10: 0387249680 ISBN-13: 9780387249681 List Price:$34.95 Stochastic Calculus for Finance II: Continuous-Time Models (Springer Finance) ISBN-10: 0387401016 ISBN-13: 9780387401010 List Price:$69.95 Fixed Income Securities: Tools for Today's Markets, Second Edition, University Edition ISBN-10: 0471063223 ISBN-13: 9780471063223 List Price:$66.13 |
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Designed to bridge the gap between theory and practice, this successful book is regarded as "the bible" in trading rooms throughout the world. The books covers both derivatives markets and risk management, including credit risk and credit derivatives; forward, futures, and swaps; insurance, weather, and energy derivatives; and more. For options traders, options analysts, risk managers, swaps traders, financial engineers, and corporate treasurers.
Awesome! | Customer Rating: | | That's a fantastic book. For people who wants to learn about derivatives and finantial markets it helps a lot. Because the book has a lot of maths I do not recommend it for people who does not have a good math support. Still, I think it is a good buy. If you have any doubt concerning this topic it can always give you an aid. | classical book | Customer Rating: | I was planning to buy this book for a few years. This is a classical book on Derivatives. A must have for anyone that is interested in learning how derivatives work and how to price them. It provides good reasoning and intuitive ideas on risk-neutral pricing. I tried learning that from other books before but the main ideas are so well explained here that now I can understand what those other books say (concepts like market price of risk and the equivalent martingale result for change of numeraire). Interest rate derivatives are well introduced here and the new chapter on more numerical procedures extends the results from previous chapters to dynamics with stochastic volatility and so on. So, this is a must have and basic reading book for any quant analyst. | Easy for complex | Customer Rating: | Even the subject cover by the book. The author masters in explaning it a lot of examples, comprehensive language and a lot of exercises. I enjoyed the book and started to use it as a course book. | No solutions to chapter problems | Customer Rating: | | For a book this expensive, you would think there would be solutions to the chapter problems but, beware, there are NOT. You must shell out another $40 to get the solutions manual. The chapters are well-written but how about the poor students? | Great intro | Customer Rating: | I started not knowing a "put" from a "call," but I needed to know a fair bit about how financial engineers (coming from a family of PEs, I'm still not used to that term) use math. This has been the introduction I wanted - not the advanced stuff, but enough to help me understand that material.
Methodical pacing leads the reader gradually through the basics, from just what a derivative is on through the brief story of how futures markets work - in short, they abstract buying and selling into buying and selling the right to buy and sell. I tend towards the concrete, so many of these transactions seemed a bit airy to me. Oh, I can follow the reasoning well enough, but I just never saw where the satisfaction of the thing solid and completed comes in. As it turns out, it doesn't. Once you've really got that in the pit of your stomach, then Hull's presentation follows smoothly.
He gradually derives models of increasing complexity. Diligent reader with a little calculus or a lot of trust will follow along easily. Later chapters draw on more advanced concepts in probabilistic modeling, but present the reader with only the aspects needed for the discussion at hand - a mercy, considering the size of the specialized vocabulary involved in the rest of the explanation.
This book ends when the foundation has been built. More advanced needs must be met with other sources - not a problem with this text, just a matter of its chosen scope. I needed that foundation, however, so I recommend this book to anyone with reasonaable math skills and a need to know the material.
-- wiredweird, reviewing the 6th edition |
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