For students enrolled in Fixed Income Securities Courses or Bond Markets Courses.
An applied approach to understanding bond markets.
Through its applied approach, Fabozzi's Bond Markets prepares students to analyze the bond market and manage bond portfolios without getting bogged down in the theory.
This edition has been streamlined and updated with new content, and features overall enhancements based on previous editions reader and instructor feedback.
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Pricing of Bonds
Chapter 3: Measuring Yield
Chapter 4: Bond Price Volatility
Chapter 5: Factors Affecting Bond Yields and the Term Structure of Interest Rates
Chapter 6: Treasury and Federal Agency Securities
Chapter 7: Corporate Debt Instruments
Chapter 8: Municipal Securities
Chapter 9: International Bonds
Chapter 10: Residential Mortgage Loans
Chapter 11: Agency Mortgage Pass-Through Securities
Chapter 12: Agency Collateralized Mortgage Obligations and Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities
Chapter 13: Nonagency Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities
Chapter 14: Commercial Mortgage Loans and Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities
Chapter 15: Asset-Backed Securities
Chapter 16: Interest Rate Models
Chapter 17: Analysis of Bonds with Embedded Options
Chapter 18: Analysis of Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities
Chapter 19: Analysis of Convertible Bonds
Chapter 20: Corporate Bond Credit Analysis
Chapter 21: Credit Risk Modeling
Chapter 22: Bond Portfolio Management Strategies
Chapter 23: Bond Portfolio Construction
Chapter 24: Liability-Driven Strategies
Chapter 25: Bond Performance Measurement and Evaluation
Chapter 26: Interest-Rate Futures Contracts
Chapter 27: Interest Rate Options
Chapter 28: Interest-Rate Swaps, Caps, and Floors
Chapter 29: Credit Default Swaps
NEW! Get straight to the point:
- With the exception of the first chapter, all chapters end with key points in bullet form instead of a summary. This allows students to quickly and readily identify the key points of the chapter without sorting through more text.
- The chapter on Collateralized Debt Obligations has been removed from the eighth edition for brevitys sake. There has not been any issuance of this product with the exception of collateralized loan obligations, and it is highly unlikely there will be future issuance.
NEW! Provide the latest information:
New Chapters:
- Chapter 23: Bond Portfolio Construction is dedicated to the different approaches used by portfolio managers to construct bond portfolios. The primary focus is how a multi-factor model can be used to identify the sources of risk of a portfolio.
- Chapter 29: Credit Default Swaps. Since the major credit derivative used for trading credit risk and controlling portfolio credit risk is the credit default swap, this new chapter describes this product and its applications.
Significantly Revised Chapters:
- Chapter 6: Treasury and Agency Securities includes a thoroughly revised discussion on agency securities.
- Chapter 7: Corporate Debt Instruments is a completely revised chapter covering bank loans (particularly leveraged loans) and collateralized loan obligations.
- Chapter 8: Municipal Securities has beenrevised to eliminate the details of different types of municipal revenue bonds and the inclusion of Build America Bonds.
- Chapter 9: International Bonds contains significant changes to describe products and sector performance.
- Chapter 12: Agency Collateralized Mortgage Obligations and Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities offers a revision on the coverage on stripped mortgage-back securities.
- Chapter 13: Nonagency Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities includes an extensive revision on the market following the subprime mortgage meltdown that can be traced back to the summer of 2007.
- Chapter 22: Bond Portfolio Management Strategies, parts of which are included in Chapter 23 (Active Bond Portfolio Management Strategies) and Chapter 24 (Indexing), provides a more structured discussion of bond portfolio management strategies. This discussion also describes active and passive strategies, and the bond portfolio management team.
- Chapter 25: Bond Performance Measurement and Evaluation, which was Chapter 26 in the seventh edition, provides more in-depth coverage showing how bond attribution models can be used to identify the active management decisions that contributed to the portfolios performance. This coverage also gives a quantitative assessment of the contribution of these decisions.
- Chapter 26: Interest-Rate Futures, previously Chapter 27, the two major changes are an update to the types of interest-rate futures contracts currently traded and an extensive illustration has been added to demonstrate how interest-rate futures can be used to control portfolio risk.
- Chapter 28: Interest-Rate Swaps, Caps, and Floors, includes an extensive illustration that explains how interest-rate swaps and swaptions can be used to control portfolio risk.
For students enrolled in Fixed Income Securities Courses or Bond Markets Courses.
An applied approach to understanding bond markets.
Through its applied approach, Fabozzi's Bond Markets prepares students to analyze the bond market and manage bond portfolios without getting bogged down in the theory.
This edition has been streamlined and updated with new content, and features overall enhancements based on previous editions reader and instructor feedback.
Offer hands-on learning: Applied Approach. The author's extensive experience in the field is reflected in his uniquely applied approach.
NEW! Get straight to the point:
- With the exception of the first chapter, all chapters end with key points in bullet form instead of a summary. This allows students to quickly and readily identify the key points of the chapter without sorting through more text.
- The chapter on Collateralized Debt Obligations has been removed from the eighth edition for brevitys sake. There has not been any issuance of this product with the exception of collateralized loan obligations, and it is highly unlikely there will be future issuance.
NEW! Provide the latest information:
New Chapters:
- Chapter 23: Bond Portfolio Construction is dedicated to the different approaches used by portfolio managers to construct bond portfolios. The primary focus is how a multi-factor model can be used to identify the sources of risk of a portfolio.
- Chapter 29: Credit Default Swaps. Since the major credit derivative used for trading credit risk and controlling portfolio credit risk is the credit default swap, this new chapter describes this product and its applications.
Significantly Revised Chapters:
- Chapter 6: Treasury and Agency Securities includes a thoroughly revised discussion on agency securities.
- Chapter 7: Corporate Debt Instruments is a completely revised chapter covering bank loans (particularly leveraged loans) and collateralized loan obligations.
- Chapter 8: Municipal Securities has beenrevised to eliminate the details of different types of municipal revenue bonds and the inclusion of Build America Bonds.
- Chapter 9: International Bonds contains significant changes to describe products and sector performance.
- Chapter 12: Agency Collateralized Mortgage Obligations and Stripped Mortgage-Backed Securities offers a revision on the coverage on stripped mortgage-back securities.
- Chapter 13: Nonagency Residential Mortgage-Backed Securities includes an extensive revision on the market following the subprime mortgage meltdown that can be traced back to the summer of 2007.
- Chapter 22: Bond Portfolio Management Strategies, parts of which are included in Chapter 23 (Active Bond Portfolio Management Strategies) and Chapter 24 (Indexing), provides a more structured discussion of bond portfolio management strategies. This discussion also describes active and passive strategies, and the bond portfolio management team.
- Chapter 25: Bond Performance Measurement and Evaluation, which was Chapter 26 in the seventh edition, provides more in-depth coverage showing how bond attribution models can be used to identify the active management decisions that contributed to the portfolios performance. This coverage also gives a quantitative assessment of the contribution of these decisions.
- Chapter 26: Interest-Rate Futures, previously Chapter 27, the two major changes are an update to the types of interest-rate futures contracts currently traded and an extensive illustration has been added to demonstrate how interest-rate futures can be used to control portfolio risk.
- Chapter 28: Interest-Rate Swaps, Caps, and Floors, includes an extensive illustration that explains how interest-rate swaps and swaptions can be used to control portfolio risk.