Financial mathematics

Financial mathematics is the branch of applied mathematics concerned with the financial markets. The subject naturally has a close relationship with the discipline of financial economics, however the subject is narrower in scope and more abstract. A central difference is that whilst a financial economist might study the structural reasons why a company may have a certain share price, a mathematician may take the share price as a given, and attempt to use stochastic calculus to obtain the fair value of derivatives of the stock.

Contents

Financial mathematics articles

Mathematical tools

Derivatives pricing

Compare

See also

Related articles

External links

  • ISDA.org (http://www.isda.org/) - The International Swaps and Derivatives Association
  • finmath.com - Financial Mathematics Bookshelf
  • rmetrics.org (http://www.rmetrics.org/) - A R based environment for teaching financial engineering and computational finance
  • Quantnotes.com (http://www.quantnotes.com/fundamentals/) - introductory articles covering mathematical finance
  • Riskglossary.com (http://www.riskglossary.com/) - an online glossary, encyclopedia, and resource locator
  • Option Tutor (http://secure.webstation.net/~ftsweb/texts/optiontutor/optutcontents.htm) - a visual presentation of modern option pricing theory
  • Riskworx.com (http://www.riskworx.com/res_inst.php) - discussion of the application and theory of derivatives


General areas of finance

Financial markets | Fund management | Financial institutions | Personal finance | Public finance | Financial mathematics | Financial economics



This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia article. Browse Wikipedia for more information.