Loading...

Empirical Finance for Finance and Banking

ISBN: 978-0-470-51289-0

January 2012

358 pages

Description
Empirical Finance for Finance and Banking provides the student with a relatively non-technical guide to some of the key topics in finance where empirical methods play an important role  Written for students taking Master’s degrees in finance and banking, it is also suitable for students and researchers in other areas, including economics.

The first three introductory chapters outline the structure of the book and review econometric and statistical techniques, while the remaining chapters discuss various topics, including: portfolio theory and asset allocation, asset pricing and factor models, market efficiency, modelling and forecasting exchange and interest rates and Value at Risk. Understanding these topics and the methods covered will be helpful for students interested in working as analysts and researchers in financial institutions. 

Designed for students with limited previous experience of econometrics, statistics or advanced financial theory, the text is written in an “easy-to-read” style.  It features empirical examples at the end of each chapter to demonstrate the empirical methods and theory discussed and uses MATLAB® for all calculations. A guide to answering end of chapter questions and relevant computer programs can be found on the companion website: www.wiley.com/college/sollis

About the Author
Robert Sollis is Professor of Financial Economics at Newcastle University Business School. His main teaching and research interests lie in the area of applied econometrics, with a particular focus on macroeconomic and financial time series analysis. He has published in internationally recognized academic journals (e.g. Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Journal of Applied Econometrics, Journal of Time Series Analysis), and in 2002 co-authored the textbook Applied Time Series Modelling and Forecasting with Richard Harris.
New to Edition

  

Features
  • Designed for students with limited previous experience of econometrics, statistics or advanced financial theory
  • Written in an “easy-to-read” style
  • Features  empirical examples at the end of each chapter to demonstrate the empirical methods and theory discussed and uses MATLAB® for all calculations
  • Includes a guide to answering end of chapter questions and relevant computer programs on the book's companion website: www.wiley.com/college/sollis