Tag Archives: Financial Markets

Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series: J. Doyne Farmer

Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series, NYU Tandon

J. Doyne Farmer, Director of Complexity Economics at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and Baillie Gifford Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford, will give the following talk on Thursday, February 25th at 9:30 AM EST. 
*Kindly note that we have changed the time to 9:30 AM on Thursdays. The new time change allows our invited international guests to join these important virtual talks.

Attend Virtually >>

Meeting ID: 994 9055 8266
Password: FREBQEDF

Title

How Market Ecology Explains Market Malfunction

Abstract

Standard approaches to the theory of financial markets are based on equilibrium and efficiency. Here we develop an alternative based on concepts and methods developed by biologists, in which the wealth invested in a financial strategy is like the abundance of a species. We study a toy model of a market consisting of value investors, trend followers, and noise traders. We show that the average returns of strategies are strongly density-dependent, i.e. they depend on the wealth invested in each strategy at any given time. In the absence of noise, the market would slowly evolve toward an efficient equilibrium, but the statistical uncertainty in profitability (which is adjusted to match real markets) makes this noisy and uncertain. Even in the long term, the market spends extended periods of time away from perfect efficiency. We show how core concepts from ecology, such as the community matrix and food webs, give insight into market behavior. The wealth dynamics of the market ecology explain how market inefficiencies spontaneously occur and give insight into the origins of excess price volatility and deviations of prices from fundamental values.

Bio

J. Doyne Farmer is Director of Complexity Economics at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School, and Baillie Gifford Professor of Mathematics at the University of Oxford. He is also an External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute. His current research is in economics, including financial stability, sustainability, technological change, and economic simulation. He was a founder of Prediction Company, a quantitative automated trading firm that was sold to the United Bank of Switzerland in 2006. His past research spans complex systems, dynamical systems, time series analysis, and theoretical biology. He founded the Complex Systems Group at Los Alamos National Laboratory, and while a graduate student in the 1970s he built the first wearable digital computer, which was successfully used to predict the game of roulette.

Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series: Ed Weinberger

Brooklyn Quant Experience Lecture Series, NYU Tandon

Ed Weinberger, Adjunct Professor, NYU Tandon FRE, will give the following talk on Thursday, February 18th at 9:30 AM EST. 
*Kindly note that we have changed the time to 9:30 AM on Thursdays. The new time change allows our invited international guests to join these important virtual talks.

Attend Virtually >>

Meeting ID: 971 4847 6117
Password: FREBQEEW

Title

Pragmatic Information and Market Efficiency

Abstract

“Standard,” information theory says nothing about the semantic content of information. Nevertheless, financial markets demand consideration of precisely this aspect of information, yet the search for a suitable measure of an “amount of meaning” has been, up until now, largely unsuccessful. This talk represents an attempt to move beyond this impasse, based on the observation that the meaning of a message can only be understood relative to its receiver. Positing that the semantic value of information is its usefulness in making an informed decision, I define pragmatic information as the information gain in the probability distributions of the receiver’s actions, both before and after receipt of a message in some predefined ensemble. The efficient market hypothesis (EMH) is then the statement that the pragmatic information of available information (previous prices, news items, etc.) in predicting future prices from zero. I contrast this version of the EMH with the more familiar claim that price processes are martingales by observing that the familiar GARCH(1, 1) process, though a martingale, violates the present version of the EMH.

Bio

Ed began his post Ph.D. career as a researcher in theoretical evolutionary biology at the University of Pennsylvania and the Max Planck Institute, but he transferred his skills in applied math to quantitative finance when he became a quant on the interest rate desk of HSBC. Upon joining Deutsche Bank, Ed became interested in financial risk management, where he helped establish GARP’s Financial Risk Manager (FRM) exam. Since then, he has since consulted on a number of projects in quantitative finance and financial technology (“fintech”), including his ongoing fintech work at Bank of America. Besides being a long-time adjunct in what is now Tandon’s Department of Finance and Risk Engineering (FRE), Ed was a visiting professor of finance at Clark University from 2014-2016.

Ed currently teaches numerical methods and Python programming in the FRE Department.

Cornell – Citi Financial Data Science Seminars

Cornell Engineering. Operations Research and Information Engineering. Financial Engineering Manhattan

You and your colleagues are invited to attend the Cornell – Citi Financial Data Science Seminars at the Tata Innovation Center at Cornell Tech, Room 131. Through the talks this semester, we are excited to collaborate with Citi in highlighting machine learning applications in finance.

11 West Loop Road
New York, NY 10044

All seminars are from 6:00pm to 7:00pm. This seminar will be recorded, and you can watch the livestream.

Seminars are free. However, registration is required for NYC attendees as seating is limited.

 

Date: Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Time: 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm
Speaker: Alok Dutt | Citigroup
Title: Data Science in Financial Markets: Hype vs. Useful Practical Reality

Abstract: The data-driven fields of AI and ML are ubiquitous in the financial industry, but despite the promise there are many obstacles to effective application. Few firms are able to reap their full rewards and it is increasingly important to distinguish what works from what doesn’t in practice. How does one navigate the opportunities and challenges amid the plethora of techniques and complexities of implementation? This talk will present a number of general principles and case studies that can help make the necessary choices to realize the transformational potential of data within a financial institution.

Speaker Bio

Alok Dutt is Head of Analytics in the Markets Quantitative Analysis division at Citigroup. He is an architect and manager responsible for various advanced projects in data analytics, trading algorithms and automation across multiple business lines and asset classes. In his role at Citi he applies data and quantitative techniques to automate business processes including research, modeling, trading, simulation and visualization. Alok has extensive experience in several broad areas of quantitative finance, including derivatives modeling, algorithmic trading and market making. Before Citi, he developed the trading models and algorithms for a new automated options market making group at Morgan Stanley that was the subject of a HBS case study on disruptive innovation. Prior to that, Alok was an exotics modeler and trader and established the first multi-asset hybrid trading desk at Bank of America. Alok has a PhD in Computer Science from Yale University and a BA in Mathematics from Cambridge University.

We hope to see you there!

The Cornell-Citi Team

Directions to CFEM&Citi @CornellTech on Roosevelt Island: Take the Tram or the F train to Roosevelt Island; walk to the left along the East River until you see a modern glass building, which is the Tata Innovation Center. Once you enter the lobby and check in, walk straight ahead to Room 131.

**Please excuse any duplication of this announcement

Upcoming CFEM Events

April 1, 2020
May 6, 2020

October 8, 2019: Cornell-Citi Financial Data Science Seminars

Featuring Machine Learning experts from Cornell, Citi, and more…

***For those of you who missed Tuesday night’s seminar and wish to see Dr. Miquel Noguer i Alonso’s presentation, the recording is now available.

You and your colleagues are invited to attend the Cornell – Citi Financial Data Science Seminars at the Bloomberg Center at Cornell Tech, Room 061/071. Through the talks this semester, we are excited to collaborate with Citi in highlighting machine learning applications in finance.

2 West Loop Road
New York, NY 10044

All seminars are from 6:10 pm to 7:25 pm. This seminar will NOT be recorded.

Seminars are free. However, registration is required for NYC attendees as seating is limited.

 

Date: Tuesday, October 8, 2019
Time: 6:10pm – 7:25pm
Speaker: Puneet Singhvi | Citi
Title: “What’s Happening with Blockchain in Financial Markets?”

Abstract

Over the past few years, the financial industry has been actively exploring blockchain and distributed ledger technology (DLT) to assess their impact in various use-cases, identify benefits, and separate the hype from reality. Citi has been an active participant and strategic investor in blockchain initiatives across the ecosystem for nearly 5 years now.

In this presentation, we will discuss real use-cases in active implementation across the financial ecosystem and review key drivers for adoption. These emerging use-cases span product lines and geographies – from the digitization of post-trade activities to transformed market exchanges, and from digitized securities to cash-on-chain models, from collateral mobility to trade finance – across North America, Europe, and Asia. We will discuss areas with tangible benefits, and what have been learnings from failed initiatives. We will also review key emerging issues with the technology and potential areas of opportunity going forward.

Speaker Bio

Puneet is Managing Director and Financial Markets Infrastructure (FMI) head for Citi Institutional Client Group. He is responsible for relationship and key initiatives with FMIs such as Exchanges, Payment Systems, Clearing Houses, and Settlement venues. He also leads Blockchain/DLT and Digital Assets initiatives for the Markets and Securities Services business working actively with FMIs, FinTechs and institutional clients on identifying and delivering solutions.

Puneet has worked at Citi across the developed and emerging markets in various management roles within Citi Markets & Securities Services and Citi Trade & Transaction Services businesses. His roles included leading Citi Global Clearing Payments Product, Citi Foreign Exchange & Derivative Clearing Product Management, Trade Finance and Asset Backed Finance.

He has a Bachelor’s degree in Electronics and Communications Engineering and has completed his post-graduation in management from the Indian Institute of Management.

We hope to see you there!

The Cornell-Citi Team

Directions to CFEM & Citi @CornellTech on Roosevelt Island: Take the Tram or the F train to Roosevelt Island; walk to the left along the East River until you see a modern, bronze building, which is the Bloomberg Center. Check in at the front desk and go downstairs to the basement, where Room 061/071 will be straight ahead on your left.

**Please excuse any duplication of this announcement

Past CFEM Events

September 24, 2019
Speaker: Dr. Miquel Noguer I Alonso I Artificial Intelligence Finance Institute

Title: “Latest Developments in Deep Learning in Finance”

November 5, 2019
Speaker: Adam Grealish (Betterment)
Title: TBD

November 12, 2019
Quant Finance Forum