Asset Pricing
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Teacher(s)Roger Laeven, Michel Vellekoop
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Research field-
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DatesPeriod 3 - Jan 02, 2023 to Feb 24, 2023
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Course typeCore
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Program yearFirst
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Credits4
Course description
This course provides an introductory yet comprehensive and rigorous treatment of modern asset pricing theory. Asset pricing is concerned with determining the value of an uncertain future payoff. Equivalently, it is concerned with explaining (variation in) expected returns on risky assets. It covers the following topics:
1. Expected utility, risk aversion and single period portfolio choice;
2. Mean-variance analysis and CAPM;
3. Multifactor pricing models;
4. Stochastic discount factors and the Fundamental Theorem of Asset Pricing;
5. Dynamic programming and pricing in incomplete markets;
6. Derivatives;
7. Stochastic calculus.
Course literature
Primary reading
Selected chapters from:
P: Pennacchi, G. (2008). Theory of Asset Pricing Addison-Wesley.
CLM: Campbell, J., Lo, A., MacKinley, A.C., 1997, The Econometrics of Financial Markets, Princeton University Press.
Selected articles and lecture notes and other material, to be made available via Canvas.
Further Reading
Selected chapters from:
C: Cochrane, J. (2005). Asset Pricing (revised edition), Princeton University Press.