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Bond Portfolio Optimization 1st Edition Dr Michael Puhle Auth

  • SKU: BELL-4259610
Bond Portfolio Optimization 1st Edition Dr Michael Puhle Auth
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Bond Portfolio Optimization 1st Edition Dr Michael Puhle Auth instant download after payment.

Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.06 MB
Pages: 140
Author: Dr. Michael Puhle (auth.)
ISBN: 9783540765929, 9783540765936, 3540765921, 354076593X
Language: English
Year: 2008
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Bond Portfolio Optimization 1st Edition Dr Michael Puhle Auth by Dr. Michael Puhle (auth.) 9783540765929, 9783540765936, 3540765921, 354076593X instant download after payment.

1 The tools of modern portfolio theory are in general use in the equity markets, either in the form of portfolio optimization software or as an accepted frame- 2 work in which the asset managers think about stock selection. In the ?xed income market on the other hand, these tools seem irrelevant or inapplicable. Bond portfolios are nowadays mainly managed by a comparison of portfolio 3 4 risk measures vis ¶a vis a benchmark. The portfolio manager’s views about the future evolution of the term structure of interest rates translate th- selves directly into a positioning relative to his benchmark, taking the risks of these deviations from the benchmark into account only in a very crude 5 fashion, i.e. without really quantifying them probabilistically. This is quite surprising since sophisticated models for the evolution of interest rates are commonly used for interest rate derivatives pricing and the derivation of ?xed 6 income risk measures. Wilhelm (1992) explains the absence of modern portfolio tools in the ?xed 7 income markets with two factors: historically relatively stable interest rates and systematic di?erences between stocks and bonds that make an application of modern portfolio theory di–cult. These systematic di?erences relate mainly to the ?xed maturity of bonds. Whereas possible future stock prices become more dispersed as the time horizon widens, the bond price at maturity is 8 ?xed. This implies that the probabilistic models for stocks and bonds have 1 Starting with the seminal work of Markowitz (1952).

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