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Black Scholes and Beyond: Option Pricing Models

Black Scholes and Beyond: Option Pricing Models

List Price: $65.00
Your Price: $40.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Clear lucid very readable book!
Review: An outstanding book! It explains the mathematics underlying derivatives extremely well. The author's style is very clear and it is a pleasure to read.

I highly recommend this book!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Intuitive & good for beginners while many typing errors
Review: Be careful with the typing errors which could be misleading
especially in many chapters in the late of the book.
Except that, it is really easy to read without much math
or computer background in the perfessional field.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Outstanding and Easy to Follow
Review: Great book for practitioners in finance without cumbersome math formula!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Logical progression of ideas in a lucid style
Review: I picked up this book as additional reading for an actuarial exam on investments, in hopes of getting a better and more intuitive understanding of the Black-Scholes Formula. This book develops ideas in a clear, natural, intuitive sequence. I particularly commend the author for a lucid and agreeable style. I was expecting a book on this kind of subject to be dry and heavy-going, but instead what I found was a very good teacher guiding me through the subject. It should be mentioned that the development of the formula entirely from scratch is not in this book, as that would basically require stochastic calculus or other techniques beyond the scope of the book. Even so, he does explain the rationale behind the formula as well as related concepts such as hedging away risk and self-financing strategies. He gives the appropriate versions of the Black-Scholes Formula for stocks with continuous or lumpy dividends and, of course, talks about put-call parity for European options. There is excellent coverage of The Greeks (delta, gamma, vega, etc.) along with numerous graphs. A nice surprise was the inclusion of some approximation formulas for the cumulative normal distribution that can be calculated easily with a spreadsheet or calculator. Finally, he has very good coverage on binomial trees, of both the classic "Cox-Ross-Rubinstein" and the "flexible" varieties. I have to admit that I have read only through Ch. 7 so far (which is approx. 2/3 of the book), but I will probably keep going because it is so good.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Logical progression of ideas in a lucid style
Review: I picked up this book as additional reading for an actuarial exam on investments, in hopes of getting a better and more intuitive understanding of the Black-Scholes Formula. This book develops ideas in a clear, natural, intuitive sequence. I particularly commend the author for a lucid and agreeable style. I was expecting a book on this kind of subject to be dry and heavy-going, but instead what I found was a very good teacher guiding me through the subject. It should be mentioned that the development of the formula entirely from scratch is not in this book, as that would basically require stochastic calculus or other techniques beyond the scope of the book. Even so, he does explain the rationale behind the formula as well as related concepts such as hedging away risk and self-financing strategies. He gives the appropriate versions of the Black-Scholes Formula for stocks with continuous or lumpy dividends and, of course, talks about put-call parity for European options. There is excellent coverage of The Greeks (delta, gamma, vega, etc.) along with numerous graphs. A nice surprise was the inclusion of some approximation formulas for the cumulative normal distribution that can be calculated easily with a spreadsheet or calculator. Finally, he has very good coverage on binomial trees, of both the classic "Cox-Ross-Rubinstein" and the "flexible" varieties. I have to admit that I have read only through Ch. 7 so far (which is approx. 2/3 of the book), but I will probably keep going because it is so good.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Understanding the B&S and Binomial
Review: If you wanna use the Black & Scholes formula to simply compute option values and nothing more, then that's not the book for you. However, if you are eager to understand the interesting and important part of option pricings theory (B&S and Binomial Tree)without dwelling into maths and understanding intuitively what makes it tick, then, you might have found the right book for you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: excellent intuitive exposition of complex subjects
Review: Neil Chriss' book, "Black-Scholes and Beyond" is the first book that I have found that clearly presents the fundamental thinking behind the Black-Scholes formula and all of the underpinning assumptions. I have looked long and hard for a book that can present to an interested and mathematically-adept reader a clear picture of the origin of the BS-formula. Books like Hull are poorly written and confusing to the uninitiated. Chriss, however, presents a logical case for the derivation of the BS-formula which has left me with an understanding of its ingredients and limitations. To flesh-out the BS limitations, Chriss presents 6 chapters on pricing options on Binomial Trees. Chriss' exposition presents trees as an alternative and powerful tool for the valuation of European, American, and exotic options. Trees are treated as a superset of tools to Black-Scholes and moreover as field of their own. The extensive bibliography has helped me track down journal articles on various related subjects so that I can further study the material.

Chriss presents a wealth of intuitive explanations to pricing options - explanations that help the reader gain a greater understanding of the limitations and problems that the current methods face. Often it is hard to find a text that presents in detail the shortcomings of a method or technique, but as any researcher would know, understanding the current limitations is fundamental to advancing the state-of-the-art. In this respect, Chriss goes way beyond any textbook available today.

The reader will find detailed explanations on how to use the BS formula and how to build binomial trees. Additionally, there is extensive material on how to build implied binomial trees and implied volatility trees. I have taken the time to write code to reproduce the material in the chapters and thus far I have had little difficulty, although the last couple of chapters could use a bit of augmentation. Nonetheless, I've read this book twice.

Chriss has done an outstanding job at presenting the material. I look forward to future revisions of this current book and to additional books that I hope he will write. Chriss has created a new standard in financial texts that I hope others adhere to.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: interesting approach
Review: This book is written, presumably, for the uninitiated reader, It explains some very simple ideas extensively and requires minimal mathematical background. I believe that the presentation could be improved by reducing the number of comments and using a more structured approach, like hypothesis-conclusion. In mathematical terms: theorem-proof. The explanation of probability notions is somewhat confusing. For example, the book mentions repeatedly the expectation of a "random event". What is really meant is the expectation of a random variable associated with that event. Since one event is associated with (possibly infinitely) many random variables this can cause confusion to the uninitiated. An event, for example "heads or tails", is not necessarily a numerical quantity. Expectation of "something" implicitly assumes that the "something" is a number. An explanation of the ergodic hypothesis, replacing ensemble (probability) averages with time averages, might be helpful. This remark pertains, for example, to the calculation of the volatility, which, in practice, is calculated from actual data of a time series. The book presents graphs of the (cumulative) normal distribution functions as "area" graphs on a chart of the normal density function. This is another notion that needs clarification, without necessarily using the notion of integral. I was looking for a book that provides a motivation for the Black Scholes formula. I am not an expert in the field, but I believe that the option price should be defined as some kind of "expected" value of the difference between stock price and strike price on the day of expiration. The approach of the book via a "self financing replicating strategy" is not intuitively clear. Very valuable features of the book are the comments at the end of each chapter and the extensive bibliography.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Recommneded for traders with advanced math skills
Review: This book isn't about teaching you how to place an option trade and profit. Instead, it's about the mathematics behind option pricing model. I am a beginner in options trading and was looking for answers on how options get priced and what parameters affect the price. To be more precise, I was carious to know how the formula looks like. I learned from the book important things like Delta, Gamma, Vega parameters and their impact on pricing options.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: The book has a unique approach to Black-Scholes formula
Review: This book well explains the probability and statistical methods used in Black-Scholes formula. As we know that Black-Scholes formula has several approaches to the evaluation of an option, and the approach taken in this book was vague. In this book not all the mathimatical elements of the Black-Scholes formula was explained. I would like to emphasize that this book would not help to understand the Black-Scholes formula completely.


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