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Quantitative risk management

June 19, 2011 Comments off

After the credit crisis hit we all realized that there’s a lot more risk out there than can be described by trailing volatility measures.  Once I decided to leave the hedge fund world, I was thinking about working for the “other side,” namely to help quantify risk and/or work on the side of the regulators.  I applied to the SEC, the New York Fed, and Riskmetrics, a software company which had a good reputation.  I never heard from the Fed, and the SEC didn’t seem to have something for me, but I landed a job at Riskmetrics.

I figured it this way: if you work on a risk in a good way, if you make a better risk model, then you can at least argue you are improving the world.  If you are instead making a bad risk model, and you know it, then you’re making the world a worse, riskier place.  For example if you are working for a rating agency and get paid to ignore signs of riskiness, then that would be the not improving the world kind.

I really enjoyed my job, and after some months I was put in charge of “risk methodology,” which meant I got to think about how to quantify risk and why.  I worked on our credit default model, which was super interesting, and I got to talk to the head trader of one of the biggest CDS trading desks regularly to understand the details of the market.  In fact many of the biggest hedge funds and banks and pension funds send their portfolios daily to companies such as Riskmetrics to get overnight assessments of the riskiness of their portfolios.  Bottomline is that my job kind of rocked, but it didn’t last forever; we were acquired soon after that by a company which didn’t offer me the same kind of position and I left pretty soon.

Here’s an article that very clearly articulates some of the problems in the field of quantitative risk.  In my opinion it doesn’t go far enough with respect to their last point, or maybe it misses something, where they talk about “forecasting extreme risks.”  This refers to the kind of thing that happens in a crisis, when all sorts of people are pulling out of the market at the same time and there are cascading, catastrophic losses.

What gets to me about this is that everyone talks about moments like these as if they can’t be modeled, but of course they can be, to a limited extent.  Namely, although we don’t know what the next huge crisis will be, there are a few obvious candidates (like the Greek, Portuguese, Irish, or U.S. defaulting on their debt) which we should be keeping an eye on to the best of our quantitative abilities.  Many of the “panic” situations (like the mortgage-backed securities debacle) were pretty obvious risks weeks or months in advance of their occurring, but people just didn’t know how to anticipate the consequences.  That’s fine for a given individual trader but shouldn’t be true for the government.

I think the first step should be to compile a longish list of possible disaster scenarios (include the ones we’ve already seen happen) and decide what the probability of each scenario is- these probabilities can be updated each week by a crew of economists or what have you.   Secondly and separately, set up a quantitative model which tries to capture the resulting cascade of consequences that each scenario would create;  this would be complicated and involve things like guessing the losses at which hedge funds start liquidating their books, but should be aided by amassing huge amounts of information of the underlying portfolios of the largest institutions.

In my opinion the regulators have made a huge mistake in the past three years by _not_ insisting on getting the entire portfolio from every major hedge fund and bank every night (which from above we know is possible for them since they already send them to Riskmetrics-like software companies, although I’ve read articles where they claim this would be way too onerous a task) and, with that deep information, model the effect of a crisis scenario from our above list;  how would it affect the bond market?  The CDS market?  The model which already exists at quantitative hedge funds now, which measures the impact and decay on trades, is a great start. Moreover, this model is not impossible to train (i.e. the actual coefficients inside the model’s formulas aren’t that hard to estimate), in fact it wouldn’t be that big a deal if we had as much data as I’m talking about.  To me it’s unbelievable that we aren’t getting this portfolio information every day (or even intraday) and creating a “systemic impact model,” because it would clearly make us better prepared for future events (although not of course perfectly prepared)  and no hedge fund or bank could argue that we shouldn’t be worried – it should be one of the costs of doing business on Wall Street.

The Greek situation

If you’re anything like me, you eat up the news on the Greek situation whenever and wherever you can.  It’s like watching a slow-motion train wreck that takes years to hit.  No, even better, it’s like this:

Imagine there’s a family that you know as self-absorbed, undisciplined, and indulgent, especially with their kids- they let their kids watch too much TV, they give their kids every gadget they can’t really afford, flat-screen TVs on credit, they stay up too late, eat crap food, they bribe their kids to like them, bringing them presents after every trip.  It borders on neglect, for God’s sake, and it will come back to haunt them, you think to yourself.  Then imagine seeing them in a crowded restaurant with their kids, older now, and utterly obnoxious and lazy and entitled, screaming at the top of their lungs that whatever the complaint is, it’s definitely not their fault, it’s their stinking parents’ fault, and why should they get a job.  It’s an obnoxiously satisfying scene to watch as an exhausted parent who has been sure to feed their kids broccoli and have their kids tucked in by 9 with their homework done and their backpacks ready for school the next day.

But here’s the thing, I kind of have to side with the spoiled kids.  I mean, it is the parents’ fault if they’ve completely spoiled their kids.  As bratty as the kids are, you really can’t blame them on this until they are rational adults.

In summation, Greece is the European version of the Kardashians.

Here’s an article which kinds of proves my point.  The politicians have spoiled the Greeks for so long, by buying votes with do-nothing government jobs, and simply ignoring the state of the deficit and anything involving money or taxes (mostly because the politicians themselves are the worst of the tax-evaders and don’t want to rock the boat), that the people living there are looking anywhere but at themselves for where the problem lies.  In other words, a completely backwards-looking approach with no forwards-looking solution in mind.  They are that kid at that restaurant, somewhere in late adolescence but not quite adults.

Another aspect of this crisis is the enormous disconnect between the economists and bankers on the one hand, who have absolute certainty that the banking system must be kept functional at any cost, and the actual people living in a country on the other hand, who don’t want to pay for the mistakes of the rich bankers.  What makes this gulf so wide?  It’s wide in any country actually, but in Greece you have the extra layer of spoiled entitlement.  I’ll talk about this disconnect in my second post about working at D.E. Shaw, where I experienced it first-hand.

Update

After quite a bit of feedback (love feedback!) I’ve decided to add to this post because I think I was too glib and didn’t make my point well.  First, let me be clear that I don’t think that the Greek workers are spoiled.  I have a lot of compassion for the working people of Greece- especially the youth.  The young people of Greece have a broken system, filled with closed guilds, high unemployment, and corrupt politicians.  I am extremely empathetic to their plight and if I were them I’d be protesting in the streets too.  What I mean to get across with the spoiled kid thing is that spoiling kids really is neglect and really is the fault of the authorities, and it sets up someone to fail and it gives them no tools to correct systemic mistakes.  In this analogy I’m trying to point out that the political class has neglected its people and its duty to create a working system.  They have done nothing for those young people, and now they are trying to make inside deals with the European bankers and don’t seem to understand why the actual working (or unemployed) people of Greece don’t see why this is a great opportunity.

Categories: finance, news

Data mining contests

So a friend of mine came over last night and he recently became a data scientist in a New York startup too.  In fact we have an eery number of things in common, although he only considered working in finance but didn’t actually go through it.  It was pretty awesome to see him.

He was also pretty into the idea of this blog and making quantitative techniques more open-source and collaborative.  And with that goal in mind he sent me these links:

  1. http://www.heritagehealthprize.com/c/hhp
  2. http://www.kaggle.com/

So what do you guys say?  Should we work on something together on this blog that may actually help the world/ make us some prize money?  That would be filthy good.

I’m also hoping to get this guy to make a guest post on some quantitative techniques he wants to add to my list.  Please comment if you have more suggestions!  I will start writing about the list topics very soon.

Hello world! [stet]

Welcome to my new “mathbabe” blog!  I’d like to outline my aspirations for this blog, at least as I see it now.

First, I want to share my experiences as a female mathematician, for the sake of young women wanting to know what things are like as a professional woman mathematician.  Second, I want to share my experiences as an academic mathematician and as a quant in finance, and finally as a data scientist in internet advertising.  (Wait, did I say finally?)

I also want to share explicit mathematical and statistical techniques that I’ve learned by doing these jobs.  For some reason being a quant is treated like a closed guild, and I object to that, because these are powerful techniques that are not that difficult to learn and use.

Next I want to share thoughts and news on subjects such as mathematics and science education, open-source software packages, and anything else I want, since after all this is a blog.

Finally, I want to use this venue to explore new subjects using the techniques I have under my belt, and hopefully develop new ones.  I have a few in mind already and I’m really excited by them, and hopefully with time and feedback from readers some progress can be made.  I want to primarily focus on things that will actually help people, or at least have the potential to help people, and which lend themselves to quantitative analysis.

Woohoo!