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Python for Finance

You're reading from   Python for Finance If your interest is finance and trading, then using Python to build a financial calculator makes absolute sense. As does this book which is a hands-on guide covering everything from option theory to time series.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783284375
Length 408 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Yuxing Yan Yuxing Yan
Author Profile Icon Yuxing Yan
Yuxing Yan
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction and Installation of Python FREE CHAPTER 2. Using Python as an Ordinary Calculator 3. Using Python as a Financial Calculator 4. 13 Lines of Python to Price a Call Option 5. Introduction to Modules 6. Introduction to NumPy and SciPy 7. Visual Finance via Matplotlib 8. Statistical Analysis of Time Series 9. The Black-Scholes-Merton Option Model 10. Python Loops and Implied Volatility 11. Monte Carlo Simulation and Options 12. Volatility Measures and GARCH Index

The GARCH (Generalized ARCH) model

Generalized AutoRegressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity (GARCH) is an important extension of ARCH, by Bollerslev (1986). The GARCH (p,q) process is defined as follows:

The GARCH (Generalized ARCH) model

Here, The GARCH (Generalized ARCH) model is the variance at time t, q is the order for the error terms, p is the order for the variance, The GARCH (Generalized ARCH) model is a constant, The GARCH (Generalized ARCH) model is the coefficient for the error term at t-i, The GARCH (Generalized ARCH) model is the coefficient for the variance at time t-i. Obviously, the simplest GARCH process is when both p and q are set to 1, that is, GARCH (1,1), which has following formula:

The GARCH (Generalized ARCH) model

Simulating a GARCH process

Based on the previous program related to ARCH (1), we could simulate a GARCH (1,1) process as follows:

import scipy as sp
sp.random.seed(12345)
n=1000          # n is the number of observations
n1=100          # we need to drop the first several observations
n2=n+n1         # sum of two numbers
alpha=(0.1,0.3)     # GARCH (1,1) coefficients alpha0 and alpha1, see Equation (3)
beta=0.2
errors=sp.random.normal(0,1,n2)
t=sp.zeros(n2...
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