“This impressive book covers an important and highly complex area of quantitative finance dealing with counterparty credit risk. It covers many vital topics and demonstrates in great detail how to compute Credit, Debt, and Funding Value Adjustments. Written by some of the best experts in the field, it provides important insights in its subject matter, which will be of great value for practitioners, academics, and regulators.”
Alexander Lipton, Co-Head of Global Quantitative Group at Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Honorary Professor at Imperial College
“This book could rightly be called The Encyclopaedia of Credit Value Adjustments, although it is both more detailed and more pleasantly readable than an encyclopaedia. It is the one-stop CVA (and more) reference for practitioners and academics alike.”
(This endorsement is a personal opinion and does not represent the view of the Financial Services Authority)
Dirk Tasche, Technical Specialist, Risk Specialists Division, Financial Services Authority
“There are many books in Finance. This one is different. It focuses on CVA (Credit Valuation Adjustment), a topic related to counterparty risk. The first chapter alone is worth the price of the book. This chapter is an ‘extended dialogue,’ where Brigo uses a question and answer format to teach, in an entertaining manner, a lot of the fundamental ideas, as well as the jargon with its alphabet-city innumerable acronyms, of modern financial mathematics, both as it is practiced in industry and in academia. His approach is creative and original; it could be acted out by two performers in front of a live audience. The book is urgently needed at a time when credit risk has emerged as the issue of the times.”
Professor Philip Protter, Professor of Statistics, Statistics Department, Columbia University
From the Back Cover
“This impressive book covers an important and highly complex area of quantitative finance dealing with counterparty credit risk. It covers many vital topics and demonstrates in great detail how to compute Credit, Debt, and Funding Value Adjustments. Written by some of the best experts in the field, it provides important insights in its subject matter, which will be of great value for practitioners, academics, and regulators.”
―Alexander Lipton, Co-Head of Global Quantitative Group at Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Honorary Professor at Imperial College
“This book could rightly be called The Encyclopaedia of Credit Value Adjustments, although it is both more detailed and more pleasantly readable than an encyclopaedia. It is the one-stop CVA (and more) reference for practitioners and academics alike.”
(This endorsement is a personal opinion and does not represent the view of the Financial Services Authority)
―Dirk Tasche, Technical Specialist, Risk Specialists Division, Financial Services Authority
“There are many books in Finance. This one is different. It focuses on CVA (Credit Valuation Adjustment), a topic related to counterparty risk. The first chapter alone is worth the price of the book. This chapter is an ‘extended dialogue,’ where Brigo uses a question and answer format to teach, in an entertaining manner, a lot of the fundamental ideas, as well as the jargon with its alphabet-city innumerable acronyms, of modern financial mathematics, both as it is practiced in industry and in academia. His approach is creative and original; it could be acted out by two performers in front of a live audience. The book is urgently needed at a time when credit risk has emerged as the issue of the times.”
―Professor Philip Protter, Professor of Statistics, Statistics Department, Columbia University
About the Author
Damiano Brigo (London, UK) is Gilbart professor of financial mathematics at King’s college in London. Previously, he held positions as Managing Director and Global Head of the Quantitative Innovation team at London-based Fitch Solutions and Head of Credit Models at Banca IMI. He has a Ph.D. in stochastic filtering with differential geometry from the Free University of Amsterdam, following a BSc in Mathematics from the University of Padua. He is author of the book Interest Rate Models: Theory and Practice for Springer-Verlag. He teaches regularly at post-university and Master courses in Milan and for professional training companies in London. He has been included in scientific committees of international conferences occurring at MIT and other academic and professional institutions. Damiano has been listed as the most cited author in Risk Magazine in 2006 and is Managing Editor of the International Journal of Theoretical and Applied Finance. His current professional interests include default and credit modelling, counterparty risk, interest-rate and smile modelling, commodities and hybrids models and risk measurement.
Massimo Morini (Milan, Italy) is Head of Credit Models and Coordinator of Model Research at IMI Bank, where he is responsible for the development and validation of new models for Interest Rates, Credit, Equity and Hybrids including at times Inflation and FX. He is also Professor of Fixed Income, Bocconi University. Previously, he has held positions as Senior Front Office Quantitative Analyst for credit derivatives and Senior Internal consultant for interest rate derivatives and models. He has served as a consultant for Banco Del Bilbao, Dexia Bank and KPMG, and regularly runs training courses on quantitative finance topics, and speaks on the quant conference circuit. Massimo holds a PhD in Mathematics and an MSc in Economics and Business with Quantitative finance specialization.
Andrea Pallavicini (Milan, Italy) is Head of Financial Engineering at Banca Leonardo. He has published several academic and practitioner-oriented articles in financial modelling, theoretical physics and astrophysics journals. He has taught in Master courses in finance at the University of Pavia and at the University of Milan.