3 edition. — Wiley, 2012 — 633 р. — ISBN10: 0470891696 / ISBN13: 978-0470891698.
Fixed Income Securities: Tools for Today's Markets, Third Edition, was revised, among other reasons, to discuss these and other issues that have assumed greater importance as a result of the financial crisis.
From the Inside Flap
Both working professionals and newcomers to the broad, complex, and competitive field of fixed income will appreciate the approach of authors Bruce Tuckman and Angel Serrat in this Third Edition, namely: theory and conceptual frameworks presented intuitively and without unnecessary abstraction; quantitative models and techniques developed with a minimum of mathematical complexity; institutional structures and market conventions described at a useful level of detail; and ideas clearly and profusely illustrated with market data, realistic examples, applications, and case studies.
Fixed Income Securities, Third Edition begins with an overview of global fixed income markets, focusing on those in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Who borrows and who lends? How big are the various players and markets? How has the 2007–2009 financial crisis manifested itself?
With the institutional background set, Part One of the book lays the foundations of fixed income pricing, namely, the arbitrage pricing of securities with fixed cash flows and the various ways to quote interest rates and returns. Part Two then describes interest rate risk and hedging, including: one-factor approaches (DV01, duration, and convexity); multi-factor approaches (key rate '01s and durations, partial '01s and PV01, and forward-bucket '01s); and empirical approaches (regression and principal component analyses).
Part Three shows how to price interest rate derivatives. It starts with the fundamentals, the arbitrage pricing of contingent claims and the determination of the shape of the yield curve, and then continues on to one-factor short-rate models. Finally, the last chapter of this part presents the Gauss+ model, a three-factor model popular with relative value traders, and—in a presentation unique for its mathematical simplicity—introduces the LMM model, an approach popular with exotic derivatives traders.
Part Four builds on the earlier parts of the book to present and analyze many other markets and securities, including repo, interest rate futures and derivatives, note and bond futures, interest rate and basis swaps, fixed income options, corporate bonds, credit default swaps, mortgages, and mortgage-backed securities. This part also contains a chapter explaining the industry's relatively recent shift from LIBOR to OIS discounting and another chapter on the practicalities of curve construction.
Fixed Income Securities, Third Edition has been written in such a way as to bring a necessarily complex subject matter—developed over years by leading academics and practitioners—to a broad audience of investors, traders, and other working finance professionals. This audience will indeed find this book an invaluable collection of tools for today's markets.