05329nam 2200661Ia 450 991082984940332120230721005116.01-119-99110-21-119-20607-31-282-12363-797866121236340-470-74530-4(CKB)1000000000719697(EBL)427943(OCoLC)437111516(SSID)ssj0000367175(PQKBManifestationID)12088522(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000367175(PQKBWorkID)10419342(PQKB)10646373(MiAaPQ)EBC427943(EXLCZ)99100000000071969720090223d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrUnified financial analysis[electronic resource] the missing links of finance /Willi Brammertz ... [et al.]Chichester, West Sussex Wileyc20091 online resource (461 p.)The Wiley Finance Series ;v.447Description based upon print version of record.0-470-69715-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.Unified Financial Analysis; Contents; List of Figures; List of Tables; Acknowledgments; Preface; PART I INTRODUCTION; 1 The Evolution of Financial Analysis; 1.1 Bookkeeping; 1.2 Modern finance; 1.3 Departments, silos and analysis; 1.4 The IT system landscape; 1.5 New approach; 1.6 Hazards of a single solution; 2 Finding the Elements; 2.1 The notion of elements; 2.1.1 Elements and science; 2.1.2 Analyzing analysis; 2.2 Elements of financial analysis; 2.2.1 Liquidity; 2.2.2 Value and income; 2.2.3 Risk and sensitivity analysis; 2.3 Input elements; 2.4 Financial events and expected cash flows2.5 Risk factors and risk categories2.6 The time dimension; 2.6.1 Time and the calendar time; 2.6.2 The role of intervals; 2.6.3 Double existence of time; 2.7 Classification of analysis; 2.7.1 Liquidation and going-concern view; 2.7.2 Analysis types; 2.8 Nonfinancial cash flows; 2.9 The methodology as an image; PART II INPUT ELEMENTS; 3 Financial Contracts; 3.1 Modeling of financial contracts; 3.2 Standard contract types; 3.3 Rules and mechanisms of standard contracts; 3.3.1 Principal amortization patterns; 3.3.2 Principal draw-down patterns (step-up); 3.3.3 Interest payment patterns3.3.4 Fixed/variable (rate adjustments)3.3.5 FX rates; 3.3.6 Stock patterns; 3.3.7 Commodity patterns; 3.3.8 Plain vanilla option patterns; 3.3.9 Exotic option patterns; 3.3.10 Credit risk; 3.3.11 Behavioral patterns; 3.4 Examples; 3.4.1 Principal at maturity (PAM); 3.4.2 Annuities (ANN); 3.4.3 Regular amortizer (RGM); 3.4.4 Interest rate swap (IRSWP); 3.4.5 Forward rate agreement (FRA); 3.4.6 Bond and interest rate options (IROPT); 3.5 Nonstandard contract types; 3.5.1 Input elements and events; 3.5.2 Analysis elements; Appendix: Practical considerations; 3.A.1 Mapping process3.A.2 Data quality4 Market Risk Factors; 4.1 Expectations; 4.1.1 Economic expectations; 4.1.2 Arbitrage-free markets and risk-neutral valuation; 4.1.3 Absence of arbitrage and economic expectation; 4.1.4 Linear and nonlinear effects; 4.2 Static modeling; 4.2.1 Interest rates; 4.2.2 Stocks, exchange rates and commodities; 4.2.3 Spreads as risk factors; 4.3 Stochastic market models: the arbitrage-free world; 4.3.1 Stock price models; 4.3.2 Beyond geometric Brownian motion; 4.3.3 Interest rates: general considerations; 4.3.4 Short rate models; 4.3.5 Forward rate models4.4 Stochastic market models: the real world4.4.1 Economic scenario generation; 4.4.2 Modeling individual products: stocks and commodities; 4.4.3 Product rates; 4.5 Alternative valuation techniques; 4.5.1 Arbitrage-free and complete markets; 4.5.2 Arbitrage-free incomplete markets; 4.5.3 Discounting with deflators; 4.5.4 Arbitrage opportunities and deflators; Further reading; 5 Counterparty; 5.1 Exposure, rating and probabilities of default; 5.2 Data determining gross exposure; 5.2.1 Counterparty descriptive data; 5.2.2 Counterparty hierarchies and group structures5.2.3 Counterparty and financial contractsUnified Financial Analysis arrives at the right time, in the midst of the current financial crisis where the call for better and more efficient financial control cannot be overstated. The book argues that from a technical perspective, there is no need for more, but for better and more efficiently organized information. The title demonstrates that it is possible with a single but well organized set of information and algorithms to derive all types of financial analysis. This reaches far beyond classical risk and return or profitability management, spanning all risk categories, aThe Wiley Finance SeriesFinanceAccountingFinance.Accounting.332658.15224Brammertz Willi1670860Brammertz Willi1670860MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910829849403321Unified financial analysis4033006UNINA