MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND
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MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND
ECONOMICS
EMET 7001
Reading Time: 15 Minutes
Writing Time: THREE Hours
Permitted Materials: A Non-programmable Calculator; One Double-Sided A4 Sheet
Page 1 of 8 – MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND ECONOMICS (EMET 7001)
Answer all questions in this section using the answer booklet(s) provided. An-
swers are expected to be succinct but complete. Answers that are too long and
irrelevant will be penalized.
Question 1 [10 marks] For each integral, determine whether it is proper and if so,
compute it.
Page 2 of 8 – MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND ECONOMICS (EMET 7001)
Question 2 [20 marks] Each part of this question attempts to determine a function f
on a given set A. For each part, first determine whether it indeeds defines a function and
if it does, determine whether the function is increasing or decreasing or neither on A.
1. [4 marks] A = [0, 3.18], f(x) = x3 − 8x2 + x− 8.13.
2. [4 marks] A = [−5, 5], f(x) = ∫ x−10 ((sin t)2 + t4 exp(t)− log(t2 + 1) + log(30)) dt.
3. [4 marks] A = {−1, pi}, f(x) = −x2.
4. [4 marks] A = [0.2, 10], f(x) solves the equation x2 +
√
7x+ 4y2 = 1 (with unknown
y).
5. [4 marks] A = [0.2, 10], f(x) solves the equation x2 +
√
7x + 4y3 + log y = 1 (with
unknown y).
Page 3 of 8 – MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND ECONOMICS (EMET 7001)
Question 3 [10 marks] An open rectangle in R2 is a set of the form {(x, y) ∈ R2 :
x ∈ A and y ∈ B} for some (perhaps empty) open intervals A and B, and is denoted by
A×B. Note that the empty set is an open rectangle by definition.
1. [5 marks] Show that the intersection of two open rectangles is an open rectangle.
2. [5 marks] Answer only ONE of the following two questions. If you attempt both,
your answer to (a) will be marked.
(a) Is the union of two open rectangles necessarily an open rectangle? Prove that
it is or write down two open rectangles whose union is not an open rectangle.
(b) Is the set difference between two open rectangles necessarily an open rectangle?
Prove that it is or write down two open rectangles whose set difference is not
an open rectangle.
Page 4 of 8 – MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND ECONOMICS (EMET 7001)
Question 4 [15 marks] Each part of this question contains a claim, determine whether
the claim is true and briefly explain. If the claim contains the phrase “if and only if”,
evaluate the “if” part and “only if” part separately. As an example, consider the following
claim: a differentiable function on an open interval is strictly increasing if and only if its
derivative is positive everywhere.
The “if” part asserts that if the derivative of the function is indeed positive everywhere,
then the function must be strictly increasing. This is true by the Mean Value Theorem.
The “only if” part asserts that if the function is strictly increasing, then its derivative
must be positive everywhere; in other words, it asserts it that as soon as the derivative of
the function fails to be positive at one point, the function cannot be strictly increasing.
This assertion is false, as f(x) = x3 is differentiable on R and strictly increasing, but its
derivative is zero when x = 0. The conclusion is that the “if” part of the claim is true
while the “only if” part is false.
1. [3 marks] Let f be a function on [0, 1]. Claim: f is strictly increasing if and only if
1 is the unique maximum of f and 0 is the unique minimum.
2. [3 marks] Consider two bonds, Bond 1 and Bond 2, with the same maturity date.
Claim: Bond 1’s yield-to-maturity is higher than Bond 2’s if Bond 1’s market (dirty)
price is lower than Bond 2’s.
3. [3 marks] Claim: the geometric series limn→∞
∑n
j=0 a
j converges (which means that
the limit as the positive integer n approaches infinity exists and is finite) if −1 ≤
a < 1.
4. [3 marks] Let f be a continuous function on [0, 1]. Claim: f has a root in (0, 1) if
and only if f(0)f(1) < 0.
5. [3 marks] Eating too much salt increases the risk of hypertension (high blood pres-
sure). Scientists recommend that daily intake of sodium (the chemical element Na)
should be no more than 2.3 grams. Calculation (known to be correct) shows that
5.93 grams of table salt contains 2.3 grams of sodium. Claim: an adult’s daily intake
of sodium is at or below the recommended maximum if and only if he eats no more
than 5.93 grams of table salt every day.
Page 5 of 8 – MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND ECONOMICS (EMET 7001)
Question 5 [5 marks] If the value of a macroeconomic variable at period t (say Year t)
is zt and zt is always positive, then the growth rate of the variable is defined as
zt+1−zt
zt
.
Part of the Solow model of economic growth postulates that
Yt = AK
α
t L
1−α
t , (1)
where Yt is the output of the economy, Kt is the capital stock, and Lt is the labour force.
The equation is a hypothesis, but Yt, Kt and Lt are observables. For the purpose of this
question, assume that α is a known constant between 0 and 1. The Solow residual in
Period (t+ 1) is defined as
Yt+1 − Yt
Yt
− αKt+1 −Kt
Kt
− (1− α)Lt+1 − Lt
Lt
.
If we assume that α is known, then the above expression only involves observables. In
words, the Solow residual is the growth rate of output minus α times the growth rate of
capital stock and the (1− α) times the growth rate of labour force.
1. [5 marks] Show that if Eq. (1) is valid with a time-independent A, then the Solow
residual should be approximately zero in every period.
Page 6 of 8 – MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND ECONOMICS (EMET 7001)
Question 6 [25 marks] Each part defines an interval A and a function f on A. Find all
the maxima of f on A for each part, if any.
1. [5 marks] A = [−3, 3], f(x) = x− exp(x).
2. [5 marks] A = [−10, 10], f(x) = x4 − 8x2 + 2000.
3. [5 marks] A = R, f(x) = x4 exp(−x2).
4. [5 marks] A = (0,∞), f(x) = x−7
x2+x
.
5. [5 marks] A = R,
f(x) =
− exp(x), if x < 0;
1, if x = 0;
2 exp(−x), if x > 0.
Page 7 of 8 – MATHEMATICAL TECHNIQUES FOR FINANCE AND ECONOMICS (EMET 7001)
Question 7 [15 marks] In some applications, it is useful to consider matrices whose
entries depend on a parameter, which means that each matrix entry is a function. Consider
the following example:
A(t) =
(
cos θ(t) sin θ(t)
− sin θ(t) cos θ(t)
)
, for t ∈ R. (2)
where θ : R→ R is a differentiable function and θ(0) = 0. We can differentiate A(t) with
respect to t by differentiating each of its matrix entries, so A′(t) is a 2× 2 matrix whose
(1, 1) entry is −θ′(t) sin θ(t), and so on.
1. [5 marks] Show that (A(t))TA(t) = I for every t ∈ R and A′(0) + (A′(0))T = 0,
where the “0” on the right hand side is the zero 2× 2 matrix. (Hint: the following
formula from trigonometry might be useful: (sinx)2 + (cosx)2 = 1 for every x ∈ R.)
2. [10 marks] Now consider a 3× 3 matrix B(t) which also depends on the parameter
t ∈ R. Each of the nine matrix entries of B(t) is a differentiable function of t and
B(0) = I. Assume that (B(t))TB(t) = I for every t ∈ R. Show that B′(0) +
(B′(0))T = 0. (Hint: trigonometry is of little help here.)