Computational Methods for Option Pricing (Frontiers in Applied Mathematics) (Frontiers in Applied Mathematics)

computational methods for option pricing (frontiers in applied mathematics) (frontiers in applied mathematics)

more information about Computational Methods for Option Pricing (Frontiers in Applied Mathematics) (Frontiers in Applied Mathematics)

Computational Methods for Option Pricing (Frontiers in Applied Mathematics) (Frontiers in Applied Mathematics)

Editorial Reviews
Book Description
Here is a book for anyone who would like to become better acquainted with the modern tools of numerical analysis for several significant computational problems arising in finance. The authors review some important aspects of finance modeling involving partial differential equations and focus on numerical algorithms for the fast and accurate pricing of financial derivatives and for the calibration of parameters.

Option pricing has become a technical topic that requires sophisticated numerical methods for robust and fast numerical solutions. This book explores the best numerical algorithms and discusses them in depth, from their mathematical analysis up to their implementation in C++ with efficient numerical libraries. Much of this information is not available elsewhere. In particular, this is one of the few books that gives detailed coverage of the following topics:

Mathematical results and efficient algorithms for pricing American options. Modern algorithms with adaptive mesh refinement for European and American options. Regularity and error estimates are derived and give strong support to the mesh adaptivity, an essential tool for speeding up the numerical implementations. Calibration of volatility with European and American options. The use of automatic differentiation of computer codes for computing greeks.

This is a book for postgraduate students, professional scientists in the field of finance, researchers, numerical code developers, and those well versed in numerical analysis desiring to learn about numerical and mathematical finance.

About the Author
Yves Achdou is a Professor at the Université Denis Diderot, Paris. He was awarded the Prix Blaise Pascal de l'Académie des Sciences in 1998.

Olivier Pironneau is a Professor at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris. He has been a member of the Académie des Sciences since 2002 and is the author of more than 300 articles and eight books.

Computational Methods for Option Pricing (Frontiers in Applied Mathematics) (Frontiers in Applied Mathematics),Yves Achdou,Olivier Pironneau,H. Thomas Banks,Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematic,0898715733,Mathematical models,Options (Finance),Politics / Current Events,Prices,Reference,Science/Mathematics,Technology,Mathematical modelling,Mathematics / General,Stocks & shares

Books Review:

  1. Contemporary Business Mathematics for Colleges (with CD-ROM)
  2. Cryptography: A Very Short Introduction
  3. Differential Forms and Connections
  4. Finite Mathematics and Applied Calculus (with InfoTrac)
  5. Fractals and Chaos Simplified for the Life Sciences
  6. Fundamentals of Actuarial Mathematics
  7. Generalized, Linear, and Mixed Models (Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics)
  8. Geometry
  9. Handbook of Discrete and Computational Geometry, Second Edition
  10. Handbook of Mathematical Models in Computer Vision

Books Review

Books Review

Recommended Books

  1. Perspective Drawing and Applications
  2. Music, Mind, and Education
  3. Voices of the New Arab Public: Iraq, al-Jazeera, and Middle East Politics Today
  4. Web Pages That Suck: Learn Good Design by Looking at Bad Design
  5. The Secret Life of Compost: A "How-To" & "Why" Guide to Composting-Lawn, Gar
  6. Urban Ecology and Health in the Third World
  7. The Theory of Search Games and Rendezvous
  8. Where Inspiration Lives: Writers, Artists, and Their Creative Places
  9. Witchblade: Revelations Vol.1, #1
  10. Victory Beer Recipes : America's Best Homebrew
  11. Window Treatments: A Source Book of Contemporary Ideas for Simple Curtains and Shades
  12. What Would We Do If...
  13. Western Civilization: 1300 To 1815
  14. Wise Words and Country Ways
  15. What Smart Students Know : Maximum Grades. Optimum Learning. Minimum Time.