Financial Markets, Money and the Real World

Author(s):  
Paul Davidson
Author(s):  
Yi-Cheng Zhang

In attempting to understand the bewildering complexity of consumer markets, financial markets, and beyond, traditional textbooks and theories will not help much. This book presents a new market theory in which information plays the most important role. Markets are portrayed with three categories of actor: consumers, businesses, and information intermediaries. The reader can determine his own role, and with analysis and examples from the real-world economy, new questions can be raised and individual conclusions drawn. The aim is to stimulate the reader’s own thinking, either as a consumer on the high street, an investor on Wall Street, a policy maker in a government armchair, or an entrepreneur dreaming of the next big opportunity. This book should also generate and inspire academic debates, as the claims and conclusions are often at odds with mainstream theory.


2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (04) ◽  
pp. 1892001 ◽  
Author(s):  
GABRIEL FRAHM

In order to prove the third fundamental theorem of asset pricing for financial markets with infinite lifetime [G. Frahm (2016) Pricing and valuation under the real-world measure, International Journal of Theoretical and Applied Finance 19, 1650006], we shall assume that the discounted price process is locally bounded. Otherwise, some principal results developed by [F. Delbaen & W. Schachermayer (1997) The Banach space of workable contingent claims in arbitrage theory, Annales de l’Institut Henri Poincaré 1, 114–144] cannot be applied.


1988 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 127-133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen A Ross

[This is a comment on “The Modigliani-Miller Propositions after Thirty Years” by Merton H. Miller in this same issue.] What a treat it is to have the opportunity to read Merton Miller's ruminations on the MM Propositions. A comment on Miller and Modigliani's work can easily become a discussion of any facet of modern finance. I will focus on the two areas of arbitrage and taxation. Since the original MM analysis, economists have learned an enormous amount about the role played by no arbitrage conditions in financial markets. Taxation is where the real world meets the theory. At first blush, the corporate deduction for interest seemed to doom the MM analysis to an academic curiosity, since it appeared to give debt an obvious cost advantage over equity. It was the genius of Miller to see that the arbitrage analysis went much too deeply into the workings of the financial markets and the economy as a whole to be easily unseated by even something as powerful as the tax code.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Wu ◽  
Xian-bin Mei ◽  
Jian-guo Sun

In the real world, corporate defaults will be affected by both external market shocks and counterparty risks. With this in mind, we propose a new default intensity model with counterparty risks based on both external shocks and the internal contagion effect. The effects of the external shocks and internal contagion on a company cannot, however, be observed, as uncertainty in the real world contains both randomness and fuzziness. This prevents us from determining the size of the shocks accurately. In this study, fuzzy set theory is utilized to study a looping default credit default swap (CDS) pricing model under uncertain environments. Following this, we develop a new fuzzy form pricing formula for CDS, the simulation analysis of which shows that all kinds of fuzziness in the market have a significant impact on credit spreads, and that the credit spreads, relative to the degree of external shock fuzziness, are much more sensitive. Nevertheless, for a certain degree of fuzziness in the market, credit spreads, relative to changes in counterparty risk, are much more sensitive. Using random analysis and fuzzy numbers, one can think of even more uncertain sources at play than the processes of looping default and investor subjective judgment on the financial markets, and this broadens the scope of possible credit spreads. Compared to the existing related literature, our new fuzzy form CDS pricing model with counterparty risk can consider more factors that influence default and is closer to the reality of the complexity of the dynamics of default. It can also employ the membership function to describe the fuzzy phenomenon, enable the fuzzy phenomenon to be estimated in two kinds of state, and can simultaneously reflect both the fuzziness and randomness in financial markets.


Economica ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 71 (282) ◽  
pp. 322-323
Author(s):  
Charles Goodhart

2003 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 829-831
Author(s):  
Christopher Brown

2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 100-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne K. Bothe

This article presents some streamlined and intentionally oversimplified ideas about educating future communication disorders professionals to use some of the most basic principles of evidence-based practice. Working from a popular five-step approach, modifications are suggested that may make the ideas more accessible, and therefore more useful, for university faculty, other supervisors, and future professionals in speech-language pathology, audiology, and related fields.


2006 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 47
Author(s):  
LEE SAVIO BEERS
Keyword(s):  

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