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aemmedar
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Joined: July 14th, 2002, 3:00 am

"option theory" book

January 28th, 2003, 8:17 pm

Any opinions of "Option Theory" by Peter James, Wiley, nov 2002? Thanks Anna Maria
 
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HA
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Joined: February 1st, 2003, 7:11 pm

"option theory" book

February 12th, 2003, 2:37 am

When Mr. Buffet pulled his money out of GenRe, he mentioned that he is not comfortable about the profit that is visible only through a sophisticated mathematical model, I heard. This sounds quite familiar to me: one of my old friend, a successful investment banker, once told me that profit is something that you can calculate with a calculator (not the one that requires several hours of cpu). Perhaps not as simple as this, I believe. But on the other hand, if it really requires a very peculiar model to state an unrealized profit, can we confidently tell our shareholders that we are making money?Mathematical models of financial derivatives are quite sophisticate, indeed. Sometimes I see people, who are trained as a scientist, spending many hours in front of computers, ending up mis-pricing a deal due to minor errors (such as sign error). I've done the same mistake before. It is quite embarrassing for a quant to produce a value that doesn't pass the smell test given by a marketer or a trader. Later I learned that experienced quants have their own good ways of performing sanity checks.I spent few hours reading this book, when I was asked for my opinion about it.Peter's book is definitely NOT a book for those who want to pick up hard core quant skills: he assumes the Black-Scholes framework through out the book. BUT he explains the basics very clearly, providing enough tools for sanity checks. If a marketer (or an accountant) working for a structure product shop understands the material of this book, I'd give him an ace.
 
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spursfan
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Joined: October 7th, 2001, 3:43 pm

"option theory" book

February 12th, 2003, 1:36 pm

it's not too bad as predominantly theory books go but follows clewlow and strickland in mixing up the jarrow & rudd (should be p=0.5) and cox, ross & rubinstein (u=1/d) binomial tree parameters