This paper is not to be removed from the Examination Halls
... A portfolio has a value V that follows a geometric Brownian motion with drift parameter (instantaneous return) m=0.10 and diffusion parameter (volatility) σ=0.2, which implies that the log return of the portfolio value from time t to time T, ln VT – ln Vt, is normally distributed with mean (m – σ2/2 ...
... A portfolio has a value V that follows a geometric Brownian motion with drift parameter (instantaneous return) m=0.10 and diffusion parameter (volatility) σ=0.2, which implies that the log return of the portfolio value from time t to time T, ln VT – ln Vt, is normally distributed with mean (m – σ2/2 ...
hw1-adam
... existent between stock prices and their respective put options. In the late eighties, portfolio insurance was sold as a way to hedge market exposure; however, with everyone using the same strategy, managers found it impossible to exit their trades as everyone else simultaneously tried to exit, causi ...
... existent between stock prices and their respective put options. In the late eighties, portfolio insurance was sold as a way to hedge market exposure; however, with everyone using the same strategy, managers found it impossible to exit their trades as everyone else simultaneously tried to exit, causi ...
Chapter 3: How Securities are Traded
... • Commission: fee paid to broker for making the transaction • Spread: cost of trading with dealer – Bid: price dealer will buy from you – Ask: price dealer will sell to you – Spread: ask - bid • Combination: on some trades both are paid ...
... • Commission: fee paid to broker for making the transaction • Spread: cost of trading with dealer – Bid: price dealer will buy from you – Ask: price dealer will sell to you – Spread: ask - bid • Combination: on some trades both are paid ...
power point slides
... in the good discount-rate beta minimal premium The model works with only one degree of freedom (zerobeta rate constrained to T-bill rate and discount-rate-beta premium to market's variance.) ...
... in the good discount-rate beta minimal premium The model works with only one degree of freedom (zerobeta rate constrained to T-bill rate and discount-rate-beta premium to market's variance.) ...
Market Penetration FY15
... Goal 1 of the LLCC Dashboard provides data that measure “Market Penetration”. As related to LLCCC, Market penetration is the percentage of the population residing within the LLCC district who use the college’s services. The District Penetration rate is calculated by comparing the number of persons i ...
... Goal 1 of the LLCC Dashboard provides data that measure “Market Penetration”. As related to LLCCC, Market penetration is the percentage of the population residing within the LLCC district who use the college’s services. The District Penetration rate is calculated by comparing the number of persons i ...
Efficient Market Hypothesis : A Historical
... discussed early in the century by Karl Pearson (1905). If the drunk can be expected to stagger in a totally unpredictable and random fashion, he is likely to end up closer to where he had been left than to any other point. In finance, this analogy has been applied to series whose successive returns ...
... discussed early in the century by Karl Pearson (1905). If the drunk can be expected to stagger in a totally unpredictable and random fashion, he is likely to end up closer to where he had been left than to any other point. In finance, this analogy has been applied to series whose successive returns ...
Market sentiment
Market sentiment is the general prevailing attitude of investors as to anticipated price development in a market. This attitude is the accumulation of a variety of fundamental and technical factors, including price history, economic reports, seasonal factors, and national and world events.For example, if investors expect upward price movement in the stock market, the sentiment is said to be bullish. On the contrary, if the market sentiment is bearish, most investors expect downward price movement. Market sentiment is usually considered as a contrarian indicator: what most people expect is a good thing to bet against. Market sentiment is used because it is believed to be a good predictor of market moves, especially when it is more extreme. Very bearish sentiment is usually followed by the market going up more than normal, and vice versa.Mutual fund flows are very useful.Market sentiment is monitored with a variety of technical and statistical methods such as the number of advancing versus declining stocks and new highs versus new lows comparisons. A large share of overall movement of an individual stock has been attributed to market sentiment The stock market's demonstration of the situation is often described as all boats float or sink with the tide, in the popular Wall Street phrase ""the trend is your friend"".Market sentiment, as such, might be acquired from more than one sentiment analytical tool. For example there could be just simple extraction of movement on stock exchange and validly called market sentiment. Another tool is to extract the news and media information based on their polarity. Yet another sub-subject might be community sentiment about the market movements (blogs, forums).In the last decade, investors are also known to measure market sentiment through the use of news analytics, which include sentiment analysis on textual stories about companies and sectors.The Acertus Market Sentiment Indicator (AMSI) is one indicator of market sentiment. AMSI incorporates five variables. In descending order of weight in the indicator they are Price/Earnings Ratio, a measure of stock market valuations; price momentum, a measure of market psychology; Realized Volatility, a measure of recent historical risk; High Yield Bond Returns, a measure of credit risk; and the TED Spread, a measure of systemic financial risk. Each of these factors provides a measure of market sentiment through a unique lens, and together they may offer a more robust indicator of market sentiment.Additional indicators exist to measure the sentiment specifically of retail Forex market investors. Though the Forex market is decentralized (not traded on a central exchange), various retail Forex brokerage firms publish positioning ratios (similar to the Put/Call ratio) and other data regarding their own clients' trading behavior. Since most retail currency traders are unsuccessful, measures of Forex market sentiment are typically used as contrarian indicators.