[Virtual] Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series: Glenn Shafer

In light of NYU’s ongoing response to COVID-19, our BQE Lecture Series will take place virtually using Zoom. 

Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series, NYU TandonDear All,

You are cordially invited to the Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series (BQE) on Thursday, April 2nd at 6 p.m.  

Attend Virtually >>

Dr. Glenn Shafer will present a talk on the following topic:

Title:

Let’s Replace P-Values with Betting Outcomes!

Abstract

How can we test the constantly fluctuating probabilities that Nate Silver offers for the outcomes of elections and sporting events? The natural (and perhaps only) way is to interpret Silver’s probabilities as betting offers and to bet against him. He fails our test if we multiply our money by a large factor. We can test a statistical hypothesis, as well as the efficiency of a financial market, in the same way. In the case of statistical hypotheses, this leads to a new understanding of likelihood ratios and to an alternative to the notion of power. See Working Paper 54 at www.probabilityandfinance.com and Game-Theoretic Foundations for Probability and Finance (Glenn Shafer and Vladimir Vovk, Wiley, 2019).

Bio:

Glenn Shafer is best known for his work on the Dempster-Shafer theory of belief functions, especially his 1976 book A Mathematical Theory of Evidence. Beginning in the 1980s, Glenn has studied the mathematical, philosophical, and historical foundations of standard probability theory and on its limitations as a theory of evidence. Since the 1990s, he has collaborated with Vladimir Vovk on understanding the benefits of using betting games (as opposed to measure theory) as a mathematical foundation for the standard theory. Glenn began his career as an educator by teaching geometry in Afghanistan in 1968; he subsequently taught at Princeton, the University of Kansas, and Rutgers. From January 2011 to December 2014, he served as dean of the Rutgers Business School.

Click on link below for the full spring BQE Lecture Series:
https://engineering.nyu.edu/academics/departments/finance-and-risk-engineering/upcoming-events

Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series (BQE): Peter Carr

In light of NYU’s ongoing response to COVID-19, our BQE Lecture Series will take place virtually using Zoom. Please find updated event details below.

Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series, NYU TandonDear All,

You are cordially invited to the Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series (BQE) on Thursday, March 12th at 6 p.m.  

Attend Virtually >>

Dr. Peter Carr will present a talk on the following topic:

Title:

Addition, Multiplication and Options

Abstract

We treat optionality as a binary operation, on an equal footing with addition and multiplication.
We begin with optionality between real-valued securities, but then use a change of arithmetic to cover optionality between assets whose prices are never negative.
We conclude with several examples illustrating how changes of arithmetic can connect disparate geometric and financial truths.

Bio:

Dr. Peter Carr is the Chair of the Finance and Risk Engineering Department at NYU Tandon School of Engineering. He has headed various quant groups in the financial industry for the last twenty years. He also presently serves as a trustee for the National Museum of Mathematics and WorldQuant University. Prior to joining the financial industry, Dr. Carr was a finance professor for 8 years at Cornell University, after obtaining his Ph.D. from UCLA in 1989. He has over 85 publications in academic and industry-oriented journals and serves as an associate editor for 8 journals related to mathematical finance. He was selected as Quant of the Year by Risk Magazine in 2003 and Financial Engineer of the Year by IAQF/Sungard in 2010. From 2011 to 2014, Dr. Carr was included in Institutional Investor’s Tech 50, an annual listing of the 50 most influential people in financial technology.

In the 2.5 years Dr. Carr has been FRE dept. chair, applications increased from 1,300 per year to 1,800 per year. For the 2018 class, current quant GRE is 169/170 and GPA is 3.82. FRE moved up in QuantNet rankings both years. An online summer course was initiated 2 summers ago and an on-campus bootcamp was initiated this past summer. Six electives on machine learning in finance were introduced. The distance learning room became operational this past summer.

We look forward to having you join us for the talk and refreshments.

Click on link below for the full spring BQE Lecture Series:
https://engineering.nyu.edu/academics/departments/finance-and-risk-engineering/upcoming-events