Fr. 179.00

Credit Default Swaps - Mechanics and Empirical Evidence on Benefits, Costs, and Inter-Market Relations

Anglais · Livre Relié

Expédition généralement dans un délai de 6 à 7 semaines

Description

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This book, unique in its composition, reviews the academic empirical literature on how CDSs actually work in practice, including during distressed times of market crises. It also discusses the mechanics of single-name and index CDSs, the theoretical costs and benefits of CDSs, as well as comprehensively summarizes the empirical evidence on important aspects of these instruments of risk transfer. Full-time academics, researchers at financial institutions, and students will benefit from the dispassionate and comprehensive summary of the academic literature; they can read this book instead of identifying, collecting, and reading the hundreds of academic articles on the important subject of credit risk transfer using derivatives and benefit from the synthesis of the literature provided.

Table des matières

Part I: The CDS Market and Product Mechanics.- Chapter 1: Overview of CDS Products and Market Activity.- Chapter 2: Single-Name CDSs.- Chapter 3: Loan-Only CDSs.- Chapter 4: Multi-Name and Index CDSs.- Chapter 5: Asset-Backed CDSs.- Chapter 6: CDS Execution and Clearing Mechanisms.- Part II:  Potential Benefits and Costs of CDSs.- Chapter 7: Potential Benefits of CDSs.- Chapter 8: Potential Costs of CDSs.- Part III:  Empirical Evidence on the Benefits, Costs, and Inter-Market Relations of CDSs.- Chapter 9: The Informational Content of CDS Spreads.- Chapter 10: Implications of CDS Listings for Reference Entities and Creditors.- Chapter 11: Inter-Market Basis Relations.- Chapter 12: Inter-Connectedness and Systemic Risk.- Appendix 1: Research Methodology.- Appendix 2: Additional Tables.

A propos de l'auteur

CHRISTOPHER L. CULP, PhD, is an Adjunct Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago's Graduate School of Business, a Principal at CP Risk Management LLC and Chicago Partners LLC, and a Senior Fellow in Financial Regulation at the Competitive Enterprise Institute. He is the author of three other books, Risk Transfer, The ART of Risk Management, and The Risk Management Process, all published by Wiley, and co-editor (with Merton H. Miller) of Corporate Hedging in Theory and Practice from Risk Publications. He holds a BA in economics from The Johns Hopkins University and a PhD in finance from the University of Chicago's Graduate School of Business.

Résumé

This book, unique in its composition, reviews the academic empirical literature on how CDSs actually work in practice, including during distressed times of market crises. It also discusses the mechanics of single-name and index CDSs, the theoretical costs and benefits of CDSs, as well as comprehensively summarizesthe empirical evidence on important aspects of these instruments of risk transfer. Full-time academics, researchers at financial institutions, and students will benefit from the dispassionate and comprehensive summary of the academic literature; they can read this book instead of identifying, collecting, and reading the hundreds of academic articles on the important subject of credit risk transfer using derivatives and benefit from the synthesis of the literature provided.

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