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Numerical Methods in Finance with C++
This book provides aspiring quant developers with the numerical techniques and programming skills needed in quantitative finance. No programming background required.
Maciej J. Capi?ski (Author), Tomasz Zastawniak (Author)
9781107003712, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 2 August 2012
175 pages, 15 b/w illus. 45 exercises
23.6 x 15.6 x 1.5 cm, 0.41 kg
"I find the monograph to be an excellent integration of the object-oriented concepts of C++ and the classical numerical techniques used in quantitative finance. Throughout the book, there is an introduction to the numerical technique to be used, along with the need for such a method from the prospective of financial mathematics. After this discussion, the C++ source code that implements the technique is not only given but also annotated to highlight or to clarify reasons for the use of certain object-oriented constructs. As the authors comment, there are some source files which are not listed but are available from the publisher's web site.
The monograph is an exceptional book for demonstrating the implementation of the various aspects of C++ in a very concrete fashion. There is substance given to C++ concepts that are introduced in basic programming courses but seldom framed in a realistic setting. The reader, however, should have some familiarity with C++ and mathematical finance, prior to reading the monograph. The book is not intended to be an introduction to either object-oriented C++ or mathematical finance. With such a background, the style and the content of the book make for an informative experience."
Professor Sherman Wong, City University of New York
Driven by concrete computational problems in quantitative finance, this book provides aspiring quant developers with the numerical techniques and programming skills they need. The authors start from scratch, so the reader does not need any previous experience of C++. Beginning with straightforward option pricing on binomial trees, the book gradually progresses towards more advanced topics, including nonlinear solvers, Monte Carlo techniques for path-dependent derivative securities, finite difference methods for partial differential equations, and American option pricing by solving a linear complementarity problem. Further material, including solutions to all exercises and C++ code, is available online. The book is ideal preparation for work as an entry-level quant programmer and it gives readers the confidence to progress to more advanced skill sets involving C++ design patterns as applied in finance.
Preface
1. Binomial pricer
2. Binomial pricer revisited
3. American options
4. Nonlinear solvers
5. Monte Carlo methods
6. Finite difference methods
Index.
Subject Areas: Programming & scripting languages: general [UMX], Computer programming / software development [UM], Mathematics [PB], Finance [KFF]