Del 13 - International Library of Critical Writings in Financial Economics series
Financial Forecasting
Inbunden, Engelska, 2003
11 779 kr
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This two-volume set brings together some of the most significant previously published articles by leading scholars in the field. The volumes investigate various aspects of financial forecasting including the forecasting of earnings, bankruptcy, stock prices, interest rates, exchange rates and risk. The articles within each section offer an overview of both statistical models and technical analysis in the subject area.The editors have written an authoritative new introduction to complement their selection.
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2003-10-29
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- SerieInternational Library of Critical Writings in Financial Economics series
- FörlagEdward Elgar Publishing Ltd
- ISBN9781840640342
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Edited by Roy Batchelor, HSBC Professor of Banking and Finance, Cass Business School, City of London University, UK and Pami Dua, Professor of Economics, Delhi School of Economics, India
- Contents:Volume I: Stock Market ForecastingAcknowledgementsForeword Richard RollIntroduction Roy Batchelor and Pami DuaPART IFORECASTING EARNINGS 1. Lawrence D. Brown (1993), ‘Earnings Forecasting Research: Its Implications for Capital Markets Research’ATime Series Models2. Lawrence D. Brown and Michael S. Rozeff (1979), ‘Univariate Time-Series Models of Quarterly Accounting Earnings per Share: A Proposed Model’3. William Beaver, Richard Lambert and Dale Morse (1980), ‘The Information Content of Security Prices’4. Jane A. Ou (1990), ‘The Information Content of Nonearnings Accounting Numbers as Earnings Predictors’BJudgment and Behavior5. Lawrence D. Brown, Robert L. Hagerman, Paul A. Griffin and Mark E. Zmijewski (1987), ‘Security Analyst Superiority Relative to Univariate Time-Series Models in Forecasting Quarterly Earnings’6. Werner F.M. De Bondt and Richard H. Thaler (1990), ‘Do Security Analysts Overreact?’7. Gunter Löffler (1998), ‘Biases in Analyst Forecasts: Cognitive, Strategic or Second-best?’8. Michael P. Keane and David E. Runkle (1998), ‘Are Financial Analysts’ Forecasts of Corporate Profits Rational?’PART IIFORECASTING BANKRUPTCY 9. Edward I. Altman (1968), ‘Financial Ratios, Discriminant Analysis and the Prediction of Corporate Bankruptcy’10. Edward I. Altman, Giancarlo Marco and Franco Varetto (1994), ‘Corporate Distress Diagnosis: Comparisons Using Linear Discriminant Analysis and Neural Networks (the Italian Experience)’11. Kar Yan Tam and Melody Kiang (1990), ‘Predicting Bank Failures: A Neural Network Approach’12. Halina Frydman, Edward I. Altman and Duen-Li Kao (1985), ‘Introducing Recursive Partitioning for Financial Classification: The Case of Financial Distress’13. Michel Crouhy, Dan Galai and Robert Mark (2000), ‘A Comparative Analysis of Current Credit Risk Models’PART IIIFORECASTING STOCK PRICES 14. Alfred Cowles (1944), ‘Stock Market Forecasting’15. Elroy Dimson and Paul Marsh (1984), ‘An Analysis of Brokers’ and Analysts’ Unpublished Forecasts of UK Stock Returns’16. David S. Bates (1991), ‘The Crash of ’87: Was it Expected? The Evidence from Options Markets’AStatistical Models17. Eugene F. Fama and Kenneth R. French (1989), ‘Business Conditions and Expected Returns on Stocks and Bonds’18. M. Hashem Pesaran and Allan Timmermann (1994), ‘Forecasting Stock Returns: An Examination of Stock Market Trading in the Presence of Transaction Costs’19. Min Qi and G.S. Maddala (1999), ‘Economic Factors and the Stock Market: A New Perspective’20. Mark T. Leung, Hazem Daouk and An-Sing Chen (2000), ‘Forecasting Stock Indices: A Comparison of Classification and Level Estimation Models’BTechnical Analysis21. Sidney S. Alexander (1961), ‘Price Movements in Speculative Markets: Trends or Random Walks?’22. William Brock, Josef Lakonishok and Blake LeBaron (1992), ‘Simple Technical Trading Rules and the Stochastic Properties of Stock Returns’23. Stephen J. Brown, William N. Goetzmann and Alok Kumar (1998), ‘The Dow Theory: William Peter Hamilton’s Track Record Reconsidered’Name IndexVolume II: Interest Rates, Exchange Rates and Volatility AcknowledgementsAn introduction by the editors to both volumes appears in Volume IPART IFORECASTING INTEREST RATES 1. R.A. Kolb and H.O. Stekler (1996), ‘How Well Do Analysts Forecast Interest Rates?’2. Gordon Leitch and J. Ernest Tanner (1991), ‘Economic Forecast Evaluation: Profits versus the Conventional Error Measures’3. Tae H. Park and Lorne N. Switzer (1997), ‘Forecasting Interest Rates and Yield Spreads: The Informational Content of Implied Futures Yields and Best-fitting Forward Rate Models’4. John T. Barkoulas and Christopher F. Baum (1997), ‘Fractional Differencing Modeling and Forecasting of Eurocurrency Deposit Rates’5. Jun Woo Kim, H. Roland Weistroffer and Richard T. Redmond (1993), ‘Expert Systems for Bond Rating: A Comparative Analysis of Statistical, Rule-based and Neural Network Systems’PART IIFORECASTING EXCHANGE RATES 6. Richard A. Meese and Kenneth Rogoff (1983), ‘Empirical Exchange Rate Models of the Seventies: Do They Fit Out of Sample?’7. Don Alexander and Lee R. Thomas, III (1987), ‘Monetary/Asset Models of Exchange Rate Determination: How Well Have They Performed in the 1980’s?’8. Ronald MacDonald and Ian W. Marsh (1994), ‘Combining Exchange Rate Forecasts: What is the Optimal Consensus Measure?’AStatistical Models9. Nicholas Sarantis and Chris Stewart (1995), ‘Structural, VAR and BVAR Models of Exchange Rate Determination: A Comparison of Their Forecasting Performance’10. Francis X. Diebold and James A. Nason (1990), ‘Nonparametric Exchange Rate Prediction?’11. Chung-Ming Kuan and Tung Liu (1994), ‘Forecasting Exchange Rates Using Feedforward and Recurrent Neural Networks’12. Christian C.P. Wolff (1987), ‘Time-Varying Parameters and the Out-of-Sample Forecasting Performance of Structural Exchange Rate Models’13. Andrew Berg and Catherine Pattillo (1999), ‘Are Currency Crises Predictable? A Test’BTechnical Analysis14. Christopher J. Neely (1997), ‘Technical Analysis in the Foreign Exchange Market: A Layman’s Guide’15. Richard J. Sweeney (1986), ‘Beating the Foreign Exchange Market’16. Richard M. Levich and Lee R. Thomas, III (1993), ‘The Significance of Technical Trading-Rule Profits in the Foreign Exchange Market: A Bootstrap Approach’17. Carol Osler (2000), ‘Support for Resistance: Technical Analysis and Intraday Exchange Rates’PART IIIFORECASTING RISK 18. Elroy Dimson and Paul Marsh (1990), ‘Volatility Forecasting Without Data-Snooping’19. Timothy J. Brailsford and Robert W. Faff (1996), ‘An Evaluation of Volatility Forecasting Techniques’20. Robert F. Engle, Che-Hsiung (Ted) Hong, Alex Kane and Jaesun Noh (1993), ‘Arbitrage Valuation of Variance Forecasts with Simulated Options’AStatistical Models21. Adrian R. Pagan and G. William Schwert (1990), ‘Alternative Models for Conditional Stock Volatility’22. Stephen J. Taylor (1987), ‘Forecasting the Volatility of Currency Exchange Rates’23. J. Danielsson and Casper G. de Vries (2000), ‘Value-at-Risk and Extreme Returns’24. Robert F. Engle and Jeffrey R. Russell (1997), ‘Forecasting the Frequency of Changes in Quoted Foreign Exchange Prices with the Autoregressive Conditional Duration Model’BOptions-implied Volatility25. Christopher G. Lamoureux and William D. Lastrapes (1993), ‘Forecasting Stock-Return Variance: Toward an Understanding of Stochastic Implied Volatilities’26. Linda Canina and Stephen Figlewski (1993), ‘The Informational Content of Implied Volatility’27. Xinzhong Xu and Stephen J. Taylor (1995), ‘Conditional Volatility and the Informational Efficiency of the PHLX Currency Options Market’Name Index