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Interest Rate Modelling. Wiley Finance. ISBN 978-0-471-97523-6. Rajna Gibson, François-Serge Lhabitant and Denis Talay (2001). Modeling the Term Structure of Interest Rates: A Review of the Literature. RiskLab, ETH. Frank J. Fabozzi and Moorad Choudhry (2007). The Handbook of European Fixed Income Securities. Wiley Finance. ISBN 978-0-471-43039-1.
The HJM framework originates from the work of David Heath, Robert A. Jarrow, and Andrew Morton in the late 1980s, especially Bond pricing and the term structure of interest rates: a new methodology (1987) – working paper, Cornell University, and Bond pricing and the term structure of interest rates: a new methodology (1989) – working paper ...
The expectations hypothesis of the term structure of interest rates (whose graphical representation is known as the yield curve) is the proposition that the long-term rate is determined purely by current and future expected short-term rates, in such a way that the expected final value of wealth from investing in a sequence of short-term bonds equals the final value of wealth from investing in ...
It is relatively straightforward to translate the mathematical description of the evolution of future interest rates onto a tree or lattice and so interest rate derivatives such as bermudan swaptions can be valued in the model. The first Hull–White model was described by John C. Hull and Alan White in 1990. The model is still popular in the ...
An affine term structure model is a financial model that relates zero-coupon bond prices (i.e. the discount curve) to a spot rate model. It is particularly useful for deriving the yield curve – the process of determining spot rate model inputs from observable bond market data.
A trajectory of the short rate and the corresponding yield curves at T=0 (purple) and two later points in time. In finance, the Vasicek model is a mathematical model describing the evolution of interest rates. It is a type of one-factor short-rate model as it describes interest rate movements as driven by only one source of market risk.
In financial mathematics, the Black–Karasinski model is a mathematical model of the term structure of interest rates; see short-rate model.It is a one-factor model as it describes interest rate movements as driven by a single source of randomness.
Its concern is thus the interrelation of financial variables, such as share prices, interest rates and exchange rates, as opposed to those concerning the real economy. It has two main areas of focus: [2] asset pricing and corporate finance; the first being the perspective of providers of capital, i.e. investors, and the second of users of capital.