Book description
In recent years, Fourier transform methods have emerged as one of the
major methodologies for the evaluation of derivative contracts, largely
due to the need to strike a balance between the extension of existing
pricing models beyond the traditional Black-Scholes setting and a need
to evaluate prices consistently with the market quotes.
Fourier Transform Methods in Finance is a practical and
accessible guide to pricing financial instruments using Fourier
transform. Written by an experienced team of practitioners and
academics, it covers Fourier pricing methods; the dynamics of asset
prices; non stationary market dynamics; arbitrage free pricing;
generalized functions and the Fourier transform method.
Readers will learn how to:
- compute the Hilbert transform of the pricing kernel under a Fast
Fourier Transform (FFT) technique
- characterise the price dynamics on a market in terms of the
characteristic function, allowing for both diffusive processes and jumps
- apply the concept of characteristic function to non-stationary
processes, in particular in the presence of stochastic volatility
and more generally time change techniques
- perform a change of measure on the characteristic function in
order to make the price process a martingale
- recover a general representation of the pricing kernel of the
economy in terms of Hilbert transform using the theory of
generalised functions
- apply the pricing formula to the most famous pricing models,
with stochastic volatility and jumps.
Junior and senior practitioners alike will benefit from this quick
reference guide to state of the art models and market calibration
techniques. Not only will it enable them to write an algorithm for
option pricing using the most advanced models, calibrate a pricing
model on options data, and extract the implied probability
distribution in market data, they will also understand the most
advanced models and techniques and discover how these techniques have
been adjusted for applications in finance.
ISBN 978-0-470-99400-9
UMBERTO CHERUBINI is Associate Professor of
Financial Mathematics at the University of Bologna. He is fellow of
the Financial Econometrics Research Center, FERC, University of
Warwick and Ente Einaudi, Bank of Italy, and member of the Scientific
Committee of the Risk Management Education program of the Italian
Banking Association (ABI). He has published in international journals
in economics and finance, and he is co-author of the books Copula
Methods in Finance, John Wiley & Sons, 2004, and
Structured Finance: The Object Oriented Approach, John Wiley
& Sons, 2007.
GIOVANNI DELLA LUNGA is a quantitative analyst at Prometeia
Consulting. Prior to this he was head of Market Risk Methodologies at
Prometeia and acted as Principal at Polyhedron Computational Finance,
a Florence-based consulting company in mathematical models for
financial firms and software companies. He also lectures at the
University of Bologna in computational finance for undergraduates and
runs courses in computational finance at the Bank of Italy. Giovanni
is a member of the scientific committee of Abiformazione, the
educational branch of the Italian Banking Association and manages the
charge of screen-based educational program. His research background
covers physics, chemistry and finance, and he co-authored
Structured Finance: The Object Oriented Approach, John Wiley
& Sons, 2007.
SABRINA MULINACCI is a Professor of Mathematical Methods for
Economics and Finance at the University of Bologna, Italy. Prior to
this Sabrina was Associate Professor of Mathematical Methods for
Economics and Actuarial Sciences at the Catholic University of Milan.
She has a PhD in Mathematics from the University of Pisa and has
published a number of research papers in international journals in
probability and mathematical finance.
PIETRO ROSSI is a Senior Financial Analyst within the Market
Risk Group at Prometeira Consulting, specializing in the development
of analytical tractable approximations for exotic options. Prior to
this, he worked as senior scientist at ENEA in the high performance
computing division and was also Director of the Parallel Computing
Group at the Center for Advanced Studies, Research and Development in
Sardinia (CRS4), working on high performance computing and large scale
computational problems for companies such as FIAT. He has a PhD in
physics from NYU and his scientific activity has been mainly in
theoretical physics and computer science.