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CEMLA Research Seminar
May 31
Hybrid format
CEMLA Mexico City, Mexico
The Center for Latin American Monetary Studies (CEMLA) conducted the “Financial Mathematics” course in digital format from November 21 to 27, 2023. Its objective was to provide participants with tools from the subject of financial mathematics with a focus on continuous-time stochastic calculus, underscoring applications to central banking using Python. The course was taught by Jaime Casassus, Associate Professor at the Institute of Economics of the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile.
The course consisted of theoretical sessions with practical applications in Python. During the first day, Brownian processes and Itô calculus were covered. On the second day, Black and Scholes valuation and risk-neutral valuation were reviewed. Numerical methods, such as Monte Carlo simulations, implicit and explicit finite differences, and applications to option valuation were covered on the third day. Then, on the fourth day, asset pricing models for bonds, futures, options, and swaps were revised and applications were discussed. Finally, the course concluded with Kolmogorov equations and dynamic programming.

Pablo A. Guerrón-Quintana
Pablo A. Guerrón-Quintana is a Professor in the Economics Department at Boston College. Previously, he was a Senior Economic Advisor and Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia. He has also been a Visiting Scholar at Duke University and the Federal Reserve Banks of Atlanta, Cleveland, Kansas City, and Philadelphia. He holds a Ph.D. and an M.A. in Economics from Northwestern University. His research interests cover labor mobility and fiscal/monetary policy, new endogenous productivity, sovereign default, and time series forecasting. He is also interested in the formulation, solution, and estimation of dynamic general equilibrium models. His main publications appear in American Economic Review, Journal of Monetary Economics, Journal of Econometrics, Journal of International Economics, among others.