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Mathematics of Investment and Credit |  | Author: Ph.D, ASA Samuel A. Broverman Publisher: ACTEX Publications Category: Book
Buy New: $103.26 as of 7/29/2010 13:55 CDT details
New (1) Used (6) from $59.84
Seller: tis-champaign Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 112501
Media: Paperback Edition: 4 Pages: 528 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6 x 1.2
ISBN: 1566986575 Dewey Decimal Number: 332.8 EAN: 9781566986571 ASIN: 1566986575
Publication Date: January 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This text is a thorough treatment of the theory of interest, and its application to a wide variety of financial instruments. It emphasizes a direct-calculation approach to reaching numerical results, and uses a gentle, thorough pedagogic style. This edition includes expanded treatments of the term structure of interest rates, forward contracts of various types, interest rate swaps and financial options and option strategies and other changes based on customer input. The text contains a large number of worked examples and end-of-chapter exercises.
New to this edition: Key formulas and definitions are highlighted and visual presentations have been added. The exercise sections have been restructured so that the difficulty of the exercises increases as you progress through each section. Real world current events have been added to further demonstrate key concepts.
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| Customer Reviews: Mathematics of Investment and Credit September 2, 2009 Benjamin L. Seamans 0 out of 4 found this review helpful
This was a book I ordered for my son who is in college. These costs are much cheaper than the bookstore on campus. The correct book was received and we had no problems receiving it in the mail. It was in good condition as the ad had noted. Will continue to use your services.
Useful source of problems August 10, 2003 M. Tuchman (Montgomery County, PA) 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
An excellent supplement to the interest theory portion of the course 2 actuarial examination. Provides many problems and more thorough mathematical explanations of many of the concepts. Some are more detailed than required for understanding of the exam syllabus, but it is still worthwhile to work as many problems as time permits. I liked the explanations of some concepts better than the standard text for this course (Kellison), but a linear reading of this material would take too much study time away from other topics. Conclusion: Use as supplemental material, but very useful nonetheless.
Do for exam success March 18, 2000 John Wong (Australia) 8 out of 12 found this review helpful
good book with lots of worked examples detailing financial mathematics such as annuities and interest rates. Do all examples for exam success
A quality presentation, but with many flaws May 18, 2008 C. Hartsig I just completed working though this book in preparation for the FM exam. While I though that the presentation of the concepts were straightforward, I found that the book was riddles with mistakes... not crucial mistakes, but errors in the examples that were clearly a result of the author perhaps entering a 10% when it ought to have been a 5% or the like. I am currently compiling a list to send him. Like I said, not fatal errors, but enough to be frustrating.
Typical Actex textbook. January 17, 2008 Genevieve Hayes (Australia) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Like all of the Actex texts that I have seen, "Mathematics of Investment and Credit" is cheaply produced and poorly presented. It covers all of the main areas of financial math: interest rates, annuities, bonds etc, and with worked examples, but even with the examples, I found the material to be poorly explained and often difficult to comprehend. There is a reasonably large number of exercises in this text. However, presumably because Actex also sells a solutions manual to accompany this book, the solutions are only given to selected questions and no working is provided.
This is the textbook that was prescribed when I took Financial Mathematics at university. At the time, I found this book so difficult to follow that I ended up buying a second financial math text, Theory of Interest, and working from that instead. Without that second book, I don't think I would have done nearly as well in that unit.
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