European University Institute Library

Investment Valuation and Asset Pricing, Models and Methods, by James W. Kolari, Seppo Pynnönen

Label
Investment Valuation and Asset Pricing, Models and Methods, by James W. Kolari, Seppo Pynnönen
Language
eng
resource.imageBitDepth
0
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Investment Valuation and Asset Pricing
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
by James W. Kolari, Seppo Pynnönen
Series statement
Springer eBooks.
Sub title
Models and Methods
Summary
This textbook is intended to fill a gap in undergraduate finance curriculums by providing an asset pricing text that is accessible for undergraduate finance students in addition to master's level business students. It offers an overview of original works on foundational asset pricing studies that follows their historical publication chronologically throughout the text. Each chapter stays close to the original works of these major authors, including quotations, examples, graphical exhibits, and empirical results. Additionally, it includes statistical concepts and methods as applied to finance. These statistical materials are crucial to learning asset pricing, which often applies statistical tests to evaluate different asset pricing models. It offers practical examples, questions, and problems to help students check their learning and better understand the fundamentals of asset pricing, alongside detailed lecture slides and an instructor's manual for professors. James W. Kolari is the JP Morgan Chase Professor of Finance and Academic Director of the Global Corporate Banking Program in the Department of Finance at Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, USA. He has taught money and capital markets as well as banking classes there since earning his PhD in finance in 1980. Over the years, he has held various appointments such as Visiting Scholar at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, Fulbright Scholar to the Bank of Finland, and Senior Research Fellow at the Swedish School of Business and Economics (Hanken), Finland in addition to being a consultant to the U.S. Small Business Administration, U.S. Information Agency, and numerous banks and other organizations. With more than 100 articles published in refereed journals, numerous other papers and monographs, 25 co-authored books, and more than 200 competitive papers presented at academic conferences, he ranks in the top 1-2 percent of finance scholars in the United States. His papers have appeared in such domestic and international journals as the Journal of Finance, Journal of Business, Review of Financial Studies, Review of Economics and Statistics, Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, Journal of Banking and Finance, Critical Finance Review, Journal of Empirical Finance, Real Estate Economics, Journal of International Money and Finance, and the Scandinavian Journal of Economics. Papers in Chinese, Dutch, Finnish, Italian, Russian, and Spanish have appeared outside of the United States. He is a co-author of leading college textbooks in introductory business and commercial banking courses. Seppo Pynnönen is Professor of Statistics at the University of Vaasa, Finland and previously the Chairperson of the Department of Mathematics and Statistics. He has studied financial markets and taught various courses on statistical methodology, empirical finance, and mathematical finance covering undergraduate, graduate, and PhD levels since earning his PhD in mathematical statistics in 1988. He has published several papers in international finance and statistics journals including Review of Finance, Critical Finance Review, Journal of Empirical Finance, Journal of International Money and Finance, European Journal of Operational Research, Journal of Multivariate Analysis, and Communication in Statistics - Simulation and Computation.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Chapter 1: Portfolio Theory and Practice -- Chapter 2: Capital Market Conditions -- Chapter 3: Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) -- Chapter 4: The Market Model -- Chapter 5: The Zero-Beta CAPM -- Chapter 6: Alternative CAPM Specifications -- Chapter 7: Arbitrage Pricing Theory -- Chapter 8: Multifactor Models -- Chapter 9: A Special Case of Zero-Beta CAPM -- Chapter 10: Event Studies
Contributor
Content

Incoming Resources