Financial Engineering One

This is the first in a series of two courses on financial engineering that take participants from arbitrage pricing theory to stochastic volatility models.

Financial Engineering 1 is a two-day course. It opens with a discussion of the Samuelson (1965) option pricing model. This model was theoretically correct but useless because it required inputs that were not observable in the marketplace. Studying the Samuelson model teaches important lessons that lay the groundwork for understanding the brilliance of the subsequent Black-Scholes (1973) model. We employ basic stochastic calculus to derive the Black-Scholes partial differential equation. We then use this flexible tool to value a variety of instruments linked to equities and foreign exchange. Turning the Black-Scholes approach on its head, we next introduce risk neutral valuation and see how it is driving current practice in financial engineering. The course closes with a discussion of fixed income term structure models.

Prerequisites for the course are the financial mathematics series of courses or in-depth knowledge of the math covered in those courses. No prior knowledge of partial differential equations or finite difference methods is required. This material is introduced in the course.

Financial Engineering 1 is the essential course for professionals who are generally familiar with financial engineering but want to take the next step and become proficient financial engineers themselves.

More Information

Sample slides from the course

Sample exercises from the course

  

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Training for Individuals – Schedule & Fees.

Training for Groups – Contact Us to Schedule.

Self-Study Syllabus

Random Walks and Weiner Processes

Stochastic Differentiation

Ito's Lemma

Stochastic Integration

Stochastic Differential Equations

Course Syllabus

Day One

Samuelson (1965) Model

Arbitrage Pricing vs. Expectations Pricing

Black-Scholes (1973) Model

Black-Scholes Partial Differential Equation

Partial Differential Equations

The Diffusion Equation

Initial Values and Boundary Conditions

Solutions for European Options

Day Two

American Options as Free Boundary Problems

American Options as Variational Inequalities

Dividends and Time-Dependent Parameters

Foreign Exchange

Risk Neutral Valuation

Examples

Fixed Income

Arbitrage-Free Pricing

Standard Term Structure Models

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