An Introduction to Credit Risk Modeling (Chapman & Hall/Crc Financial Mathematics Series)
By Christian Bluhm, Ludger Overbeck, Christoph Wagner
In today's increasingly competitive financial world, successful risk management, portfolio management, and financial structuring demand more than up-to-date financial know-how. They also call for quantitative expertise, including the ability to effectively apply mathematical modeling tools and techniques. An Introduction to Credit Risk Modeling supplies both the bricks and the mortar of risk management.
In a gentle and concise lecture-note style, it introduces the fundamentals of credit risk management, provides a broad treatment of the related modeling theory and methods, and explores their application to credit portfolio securitization, credit risk in a trading portfolio, and credit derivatives risk. The presentation is thorough but refreshingly accessible, foregoing unnecessary technical details yet remaining mathematically precise.
Whether you are a risk manager looking for a more quantitative approach to credit risk or you are planning a move from the academic arena to a career in professional credit risk management, An Introduction to Credit Risk Modeling is the book you've been looking for.
It will bring you quickly up to speed with information needed to resolve the questions and quandaries encountered in practice.Features"Concisely presents the most fundamental and up-to-date concepts of credit portfolio management "Introduces modeling frameworks such as KMV, CreditMetrics, and CreditRisk+"Presents best practices in credit risk modeling "Keeps mathematical proofs to a minimum while remaining mathematically solid
<script type="text/javascript"></script>Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #468555 in Books
- Published on: 2002-09-27
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 297 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
As an introductory survey it does an admirable job.
this book is an important guide into the field of credit risk models. Mainly for the practitioner and less for the academician.
It is well written, fairly easy to follow.
-Horst Behncke, Zentralblatt Math
There are so many financial tools available today and numbers are likely to grow in the future. If you work in this field of credit risk modelling it is worth looking at the theoretical background, and this book is a well-rounded introduction.
Journal of the Operational Research Society
This is an outstanding book on the default models that are used internally by financial institutions. This practical book delves into the mathematics, the assumptions and the approximations that practitioners apply to make these models work.
- Glyn A Holton of 'Contingency Analysis'