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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dont buy it if you are not in the trade or profession
I am not saying this is not a good book. In fact, this is by far the best I had come across on Convertible Arbitrage. It's so informative and well written that it should be a handbook for hedge fund professionals or finance professors. However, it's far beyond the comprehension of the investment public who would surely be confused by the vast amount of greek alphabets,...
Published on October 13, 2004 by ServantofGod

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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not the best book
To successfully employ convertible arbitrage, you need to value convertible bonds (CBs) correctly to be able to find underpriced CBs to buy, and then you need to know the number (delta) of stocks to short sell to hedge your position. How do you do this? The book correctly tells you that a binomial method must be used, but it spends only 10 pages or so on this matter! And...
Published on May 16, 2005 by Analyst


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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dont buy it if you are not in the trade or profession, October 13, 2004
This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
I am not saying this is not a good book. In fact, this is by far the best I had come across on Convertible Arbitrage. It's so informative and well written that it should be a handbook for hedge fund professionals or finance professors. However, it's far beyond the comprehension of the investment public who would surely be confused by the vast amount of greek alphabets, financial equations and graphs. Of course, for those affluent readers (time- and money-wise) who want to learn, say, Bearish Tilt Gamma Convertible Hedge, Vega Hedge thru Volatility Swap etc. despite the technicalities and scale issues facing individual investors, it's definitely not a bad bet.

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars First True Practical Guide to Capital Structure Arbitrage, July 23, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
This book joins a number of 'hot' topic based books on convertible arb but makes itself stand out by being the first to truly discuss the details of the arbitrages, how to trade and hedge them and how to identify them efficiently.
Further credit (excuse the pun) should be given for extension into the CDS market and the use of more advanced credit hedging techniques.
A must read for any academic interested in studying the fixed income arbitrage markets and a useful reference for any practitioner who thinks he knows what is involved in running an arb book.
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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not the best book, May 16, 2005
This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
To successfully employ convertible arbitrage, you need to value convertible bonds (CBs) correctly to be able to find underpriced CBs to buy, and then you need to know the number (delta) of stocks to short sell to hedge your position. How do you do this? The book correctly tells you that a binomial method must be used, but it spends only 10 pages or so on this matter! And even if you are proficient with binomial valuation, this description is quite poor and confusing. Most important though, the book does NOT cover the more complex attributes of convertible bonds (such as call and put provisions) that are very common. How can you expect to find underpriced CBs if you don't value them properly? If you truly want to learn convertible arbitrage, I instead recommend the book "Pricing convertible bonds" by Kevin Connolly who carefully explains all the things you need to know about the valuation of CBs, so that even if you have never heard about binomial trees you will still understand it (he also supplies a disc with excel files).
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars good but cryptic, September 18, 2006
This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
i studied from this book for the CAIA exam. while it presented some very fascinating approaches and ideas for me, keeping in mind i am not a practising arbitrageur yet, it was very poorly edited and written in general.

every book starts with an assumption about the level of sophistication the reader. this book seems to assume different levels in different chapters and even paragraphs. the chapter on equity valuation is written for kids (lose the chapter, nick) and the ones on hedging techniques doesn't even bother to list assumptions behind complex positions.

the author uses the most confusing notations. e.g. Nu-1, literally typed out like that, which is supposed to represent a variable with subscript u-1. geez - whatever happened to computer typesettng with actual subscripts, and why use the same notation for different variables in different formulae? at least he could have used Nu-1 and Mu-1. I spent a lot of time making sense out of this one and assumed he was referring to Nu minus 1!

basically, if the same ideas were carefully thought out and presented by better editing and writing (and typesetting!), this would be an enjoyable book. as it stands, its a torture to go through. such wonderful ideas and such poor presentation. this one went out the door too early.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Requires a very, very careful approach...., May 17, 2007
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This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
This is no book for beginners, as I have a background in economics, econometrics, and trading, but I find the prose jumps over and casually breezes past assumptions, leaving me thinking I must have missed something. In almost each sentence and paragraph you have to absorb and absorb and keeping trying to figure out the author's angles on what he means. Currently I am on pages 139-140, and I find impatience when encountering one-time blithe statements like "In practice, some slight additions to the short position on the way up will lock in some gains and avoid a hedge ratio that is extremely low relative to the delta." Or, "The hedge ratio on a leveraged bullish tilt position should generally be slightly more than the hedge ratio on the un-levered bullish tilt position to reduce some of the added volatility in the return." The syntax while trying to be plain language, loses the reader. I keep asking what exactly is "generally be slightly more than the hedge ratio" mean in the context of a portfolio; and do you own one each of the levered and unlevered to reduce volatility, and if not how can I be so confident my hedge ratio is thus adjusted properly if the volatility is well, volatile? It is like he writes to impress, which is not a bad thing by itself. It's clear he's having a good time. But if read aloud at a conference of CEO's, I can envision them nodding their heads and furrowing their sagacious brows without actually a full understanding of what is said.

So the prose is dense. But it eventually "sounds" right to the ear if read over a couple times quickly, but still loaded with very subtle ideas watered down into plain words which can makes me stop and pause to consider each idea as if it were some kind of rosetta stone to the prior material. At the same time it gets me to pause and think, which is an upside and rewards patience. But it's getting harder to gauge at this chapter how much progress I have made or not made, but I optimistically press on. I keep it hand so I can have more chances to peek inside this mysterious veil of conv arb. and learn something new and interesting.

It would be helpful to have more specific details where a natural question of 'why?' occurs if asked by a reader. From my own perspective, formulas would be far more compact and precise in conveying these ideas. English studies or philosophy enthusiasts may find it an enjoyable challenge to discern the Da Vinci-code like meanings.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Calamos provides perspective and mechanics, August 8, 2004
This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
I managed a convertible arbitrage portfolio for over 3 years from 1998-2002. When I began managing, the information found in this one book, had to be gathered from many different resources, if it was available at all. I wish this had been available when I first began. This book exposed me to techniques that I have not used before because of my investment mandate. Now I have them in my toolbox if I decide to hunt extra "alpha" for my portfolio.

Some of the techniques are only applicable by arbitrageurs that are in foreign markets. Even these are creative and inspire great avenues for further thought. It was while studying these that the thought occurred to me that the book might not be useable by the individual investor unless they are highly unique.

There are elements of this book that have the air of "promotion" to it. The first chapter cites the advantages of this technique in concert with other management styles. The returns and other statistics span from publication date back to 1995. 1994 was a profoundly difficult year for convertible arb managers and could possibly weakened Calamos' assertions (to be fair he acknowledges as much at the end of the book). Convertible arbitrage will have difficult comparisons when it operates in an environment of low volatility and rising rates unless all risk (and return) are hedged away.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Too techincal for a novice, too naive for a professional, January 7, 2008
This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
Calamos has put together a useful reference for those interested in learning more about the proper pricing of convertibles. However his own agenda is quite transparent when looking at his own performance - picking the bottom (2002) of the CB wipeout to chart his own performance.

There are other gaps such as a lack of consideration of stock price movement and its influence on omicron (change of CB prices w/ resepct to credit spread). This has been researched by Berger and others - it the stock craps out, one side of the market is saying the credit worthiness of the issuer has declined.

If you are really going to *TRADE* a CB book, you need to quantify as many of these variables as possible with respect to each other. No risk factor exists in a vacuum, but Calamos seems to skip this level of integration.

If you are not a market practioner but would like to be, read this before an interview. Otherwise, it inhabits that middle ground of being too techincal for a novice and too naive for a professional.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Excellent Primer on the subject, August 22, 2006
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This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
As a technologist charged with implementing a convertible arbitrage fund, this book was incredibly helpful. By reading it, I learned enough about the strategy and how it works to have intelligent conversations with portfolio managers and analysts and understand what needs to be done to make it work. The book covers the Greeks and why they matter, and gives explanations of the strategies that are easily understood, but whose details are laid out in sufficient depth that the layperson might not be able absorb them all the first time through.

The books doesn't, and really can't, get into issues relating to data providers, prime brokers, and other execution-related topics. Yet it does cover almost every permutation of the strategy that you might find currently being implemented by a CA fund.

Overall, I think that this book provides an excellent grounding in the strategy, is a very engaging read, and will be a good reference as your understanding of the subject grows.

In closing, let me say this: The chapter on the Greeks alone justifies the purchase of this book. I have received questions from people wanting to know how I gained such depth of understanding in convertible/capital structure arbitrage so quickly, and I do not hesitate to hand them this book. (Well, maybe there is some hesitation.)
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6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is one of the best on hedge fund strategies., January 28, 2004
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"yin_luo" (Toronto, ON CANADA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
This is by far one of the best books on hedge fund strategies. It's very practical, but also provides enough technical details. Most other books on hedge funds just state some basic facts that everybody knows. This book, however, provides enough details on one single strategy, convertible arb. I would highly recommend this book to any serious Quant who wants to know more about convertible arb.
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2 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A must for portfolio managers - invaluable information, July 31, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging (Hardcover)
Convertible arbitrage is an alternative investment form that is ever-increasing in popularity. This book teaches both portfolio managers and fund of funds analysts everything they need to know about convertible bonds and includes a thorough background, a description of the various techniques, and valuation models. Illustrates points with informative graphs, tables, and appendices. An excellent resource tool.
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Convertible Arbitrage: Insights and Techniques for Successful Hedging
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