菜油,巴中天气预报,邓丽欣门照艳全集
Yue Hin Lo 2004/5 An Application of Wavelet Analysis to Discrete-Time Optimal Hedging Strategy Ryan Jong 2004/5 Gazing the Crystal Ball: Forming Predictive Distributions of Next Day Equity Returns; the Extended Jong and Hall Model Josh Matthew Anstey 2003/4 Pricing Credit Derivatives-Nth to Default Swaps Antoine Bechet 2003/4 Pricing of Credit Default Swaps James Charlesworth 2003/4 A Monte-Carlo Approach to the Pricing of Interest Rate Swaptions 11 John Stuart Gardener 2003/4 Value at Risk: An Analysis of Estimation Techniques and Option Positions Patrice Guesnet 2003/4 Credit Default Swaps: A Tool to Assess Sovereign Default Risk Teng Jiang 2003/4 Stock Returns Forecasting: A Comparison of Improved Neural Networks Manoj Kumar Kapai 2003/4 Pricing Barrier Options Lin Luo 2003/4 Valuation of Companies: A Real Options Approach Alexis Galatariotis 2002/3 Determinants of corporate risk management for US nonfinancial firms Richard Maile 2002/3 A comparison between analytical and numerical techniques for pricing weather derivatives Pavlos Vitos 2002/3 Application of real options to shipping investments Stamatis Bezerianos 2002/3 Estimation of the term structure of interest rates using numerical techniques Alexander Bleck 2002/3 Swaption skews in the LIBOR market model Baudovin Del Marmol 2002/3 Computation of the error in a minimum variance hedge Constantinos Ekkeshis 2002/3 FTSE 100: testing market efficiency Rifaie Khairulanwar 2002/3 KR-model: a bankruptcy Prediction model for companies in Malaysia Christopher Blair 2001/2 Pricing derivatives using Monte-Carlo techniques James Patrick Hoare 2001/2 Modelling the term structure of default Lydia Kurniawan 2001/2 Market efficiency on the stock market Matteo Nardi 2001/2 Forecasting volatility Christos Papakyriakou 2001/2 Behavioural finance, noise traders and technical analysis Matthew Reid 2001/2 Credit derivatives Yan Hoo Yip 2001/2 Valuing investments using real options 12 IV. WRITING UP YOUR PROJECT These notes have been designed to answer, briefly, many of the questions, which you may otherwise have asked your supervisors individually. Much of the information is advisory, but some sections (introduced by a heading in capital letters) are mandatory and failure to observe them may result in the project being rejected. The Examiners pay special attention not only to the content of the reports but also to their presentation. In this connection it is important that each student ensures that the material in the report is presented in grammatically correct English and is free from spelling, typographical and other errors. The Examiners may in appropriate cases require the student to carry out amendments to the presentation (i.e. to correct the above-mentioned errors) within a period of one month after the |