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Introduction to Credit Risk Modeling, Second Edition (Chapman & Hall/CRC Financial Mathematics Series)
 
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Introduction to Credit Risk Modeling, Second Edition (Chapman & Hall/CRC Financial Mathematics Series) [Hardcover]

Christian Bluhm , Ludger Overbeck , Christoph Wagner
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Frequently Bought Together

Introduction to Credit Risk Modeling, Second Edition (Chapman & Hall/CRC Financial Mathematics Series) + Credit Risk Modeling Using Excel and VBA (The Wiley Finance Series) + Counterparty Credit Risk: The New Challenge for Global Financial Markets (The Wiley Finance Series)
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Product details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Chapman and Hall/CRC; 2 edition (7 Jun 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1584889926
  • ISBN-13: 978-1584889922
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 16 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 694,247 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Christian Bluhm
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Product Description

Review

… this is a concise book for exploring the limitations of credit risk models and, to a lesser degree, asset valuation models. Read this book for a companionable journey through some of the limiting assumptions that make the models tractable. … it may be the first one [book] that wastes no time in getting to the point, and moving on.
Annals of Actuarial Science, Vol. 5, June 2011

Bluhm, Overbeck, and Wagner offer help to mathematicians and physicists leaving the academy to work as risk or portfolio managers. For this introduction, they focus on main themes rather than details, and on portfolio rather than single obligor risk. … this second [edition] takes account of problems in the banking industry [from] 2007-09.
SciTech Book News, February 2011

Having a valid and up-to-date credit risk model (or models) is one of the most important aspects in today’s risk management. The models require quite a bit of technical as well as practical know-how. Introduction to Credit Risk Modeling serves this purpose well. … it would best fit the practitioner’s needs. For students it can also be of great use, as an introductory course for credit risk models. A great first step into credit risk modeling. … The book provides a nice coherent overview of the methods used in capital allocation. … The book is written in a mixture of theorem-proof and applied styles. … I find this rather pleasing, as it gives the reader the edge of theoretical exposition, which is extremely important. … One really useful side of the book is that it provides step-by-step guide to methods presented. This should be really appreciated in industry and among students. …
MAA Reviews, January 2011

Praise for the First Edition
This is an outstanding book on the default models that are used internally by financial institutions. This practical book delves into the mathematics, the assumptions and the approximations that practitioners apply to make these models work.
—Glyn A. Holton, Contingency Analysis

There are so many financial tools available today and numbers are likely to grow in the future. If you work in this field of credit risk modelling it is worth looking at the theoretical background, and this book is a well-rounded introduction.
Journal of the Operational Research Society

As an introductory survey it does an admirable job. … this book is an important guide into the field of credit risk models. Mainly for the practitioner … It is well written, fairly easy to follow.
—Horst Behncke, Zentralblatt MATH

Product Description

Contains Nearly 100 Pages of New Material

The recent financial crisis has shown that credit risk in particular and finance in general remain important fields for the application of mathematical concepts to real-life situations. While continuing to focus on common mathematical approaches to model credit portfolios, Introduction to Credit Risk Modeling, Second Edition presents updates on model developments that have occurred since the publication of the best-selling first edition.

New to the Second Edition

  • An expanded section on techniques for the generation of loss distributions
  • Introductory sections on new topics, such as spectral risk measures, an axiomatic approach to capital allocation, and nonhomogeneous Markov chains
  • Updated sections on the probability of default, exposure-at-default, loss-given-default, and regulatory capital
  • A new section on multi-period models
  • Recent developments in structured credit

The financial crisis illustrated the importance of effectively communicating model outcomes and ensuring that the variation in results is clearly understood by decision makers. The crisis also showed that more modeling and more analysis are superior to only one model. This accessible, self-contained book recommends using a variety of models to shed light on different aspects of the true nature of a credit risk problem, thereby allowing the problem to be viewed from different angles.


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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
Format:Hardcover
The authors have done an excellent job introducing industry standard models and give a reasonably unbiased view of the relative merits of each approach. Copula method are introduced and while the authors do jump on the band-wagon of beating up the Gaussian copula they do at least acknowledge that it is not yet clear how to fit other copula to observed history. The mathematics is rigourous but the notation and exposition are lucid. This book should be of great use to anyone needing to understand the issues facing banks needing to implement models to address the requirements for credit risk in the trading book.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Bad flow, list of references 4 Nov 2010
By Keith A. Johansen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
The book proceeds mostly as theorem, proof, theorem, proof, but the proofs are incomplete. Many of the proofs simply cite a reference, I do not consider that a proof at all.

Nearly every paragraph cites multiple references, and claims the topic is outside the scope of the book and the reader should refer to some other book. It seems that most everything the book covers is in some way or another "out of the scope" of the book.

The flow is incoherent. Chapters 1 and 2 frequently cite figures and sections in chapter 4 and beyond.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Great book for stat oriented readers 6 April 2011
By LOV - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This book is written for statisticians, applied probabilists, and applied mathematicians. If you are one of them, this can be a perfect "intro" book to credit risk modeling. Like many other "intro" books, this book is relatively advanced (and for some books, "advanced" sounds more like intro). It providse pretty good details of each major credit risk approach. However, if you are not one of the heavy stat-oriented people, this may not be a perfect intro for you.
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