Book Image

Mastering Python for Finance - Second Edition

By : James Ma Weiming
Book Image

Mastering Python for Finance - Second Edition

By: James Ma Weiming

Overview of this book

The second edition of Mastering Python for Finance will guide you through carrying out complex financial calculations practiced in the industry of finance by using next-generation methodologies. You will master the Python ecosystem by leveraging publicly available tools to successfully perform research studies and modeling, and learn to manage risks with the help of advanced examples. You will start by setting up your Jupyter notebook to implement the tasks throughout the book. You will learn to make efficient and powerful data-driven financial decisions using popular libraries such as TensorFlow, Keras, Numpy, SciPy, and scikit-learn. You will also learn how to build financial applications by mastering concepts such as stocks, options, interest rates and their derivatives, and risk analytics using computational methods. With these foundations, you will learn to apply statistical analysis to time series data, and understand how time series data is useful for implementing an event-driven backtesting system and for working with high-frequency data in building an algorithmic trading platform. Finally, you will explore machine learning and deep learning techniques that are applied in finance. By the end of this book, you will be able to apply Python to different paradigms in the financial industry and perform efficient data analysis.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Python
3
Section 2: Financial Concepts
9
Section 3: A Hands-On Approach

Nonlinearity in Finance

In recent years, there has been a growing interest in research on nonlinear phenomena in economic and financial theory. With nonlinear serial dependence playing a significant role in the returns of many financial time series, this makes security valuation and pricing very important, leading to an increase in studies on the nonlinear modeling of financial products.

Practitioners in the financial industry use nonlinear models to forecast volatility, price derivatives, and compute Value at Risk (VAR). Unlike linear models, where linear algebra is used to find a solution, nonlinear models do not necessarily infer a global optimal solution. Numerical root-finding methods are usually employed to converge toward the nearest local optimal solution, which is a root.

In this chapter, we will discuss the following topics:

  • Nonlinearity modeling
  • Examples of nonlinear...