TY - BOOK AU - Bartholomew-Biggs,Michael ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Nonlinear Optimization with Financial Applications SN - 9780387241494 AV - QA402.5-402.6 U1 - 519.6 23 PY - 2005/// CY - Boston, MA PB - Springer US KW - Mathematics KW - Finance KW - Numerical analysis KW - Computer mathematics KW - Mathematical optimization KW - Operations research KW - Management science KW - Optimization KW - Operations Research, Management Science KW - Numeric Computing KW - Computational Mathematics and Numerical Analysis KW - Finance, general KW - Numerical Analysis N1 - Portfolio Optimization -- One-Variable Optimization -- Optimal Portfolios with N Assets -- Unconstrained Optimization in N Variables -- The Steepest Descent Method -- The Newton Method -- Quasi-Newton Methods -- Conjugate Gradient Methods -- Optimal Portfolios with Restrictions -- Larger-Scale Portfolios -- Data-Fitting & The Gauss-Newton Method -- Equality Constrained Optimization -- Linear Equality Constraints -- Penalty Function Methods -- Sequential Quadratic Programming -- Further Portfolio Problems -- Inequality Constrained Optimization -- Extending Equality-Constraint Methods to Inequalities -- Barrier Function Methods -- Interior Point Methods -- Data Fitting Using Inequality Constraints -- Portfolio Re-Balancing and other Problems -- Global Unconstrained Optimization N2 - The book introduces the key ideas behind practical nonlinear optimization.Computational finance—an increasingly popular area of mathematics degree programmes—is combined here with the study of an important class of numerical techniques.The financial content of the book is designed to be relevant and interesting to specialists. However, this material—which occupies about one-third of the text—is also sufficiently accessible to allow the book to be used on optimization courses of a more general nature.The essentials of most currently popular algorithms are described and their performance is demonstrated on a range of optimization problems arising in financial mathematics.Theoretical convergence properties of methods are stated and formal proofs are provided in enough cases to be instructive rather than overwhelming.Practical behaviour of methods is illustrated by computational examples and discussions of efficiency, accuracy and computational costs.Supporting software for the examples and exercises is available (but the text does not require the reader to use or understand these particular codes).The author has been active in optimization for over thirty years in algorithm development and application and in teaching and research supervision. Audience The book is aimed at lecturers and students (undergraduate and postgraduate) in mathematics, computational finance and related subjects. It is also useful for researchers and practitioners who need a good introduction to nonlinear optimization UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/b102601 ER -