[lbo-talk] Formula breaks down Wall Street

Charles Brown cdb1003 at prodigy.net
Thu Mar 5 15:05:20 PST 2009


Conspiracy ! The new Manchurian candidate/finance quant

Just kidding , John G.

WIRED MAGAZINE: 17.03 Recipe for Disaster: The Formula That Killed Wall Street By Felix Salmon 02.23.09

http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/17-03/wp_quant

In the mid-'80s, Wall Street turned to the quants—brainy financial engineers—to invent new ways to boost profits. Their methods for minting money worked brilliantly... until one of them devastated the global economy.

A year ago, it was hardly unthinkable that a  math wizard like David X. Li might someday earn a Nobel Prize. After all, financial economists—even Wall Street quants—have received the Nobel in economics before, and Li's work on measuring risk has had more impact, more quickly, than previous Nobel Prize-winning  contributions to the field. Today, though, as dazed bankers, politicians, regulators, and investors survey the wreckage of the biggest financial meltdown since the Great Depression, Li is probably thankful he still has a job in finance at all. Not that his achievement should be dismissed. He took a notoriously tough nut—determining correlation, or how seemingly disparate events are related—and cracked  it wide open with a simple and elegant mathematical formula, one that would become ubiquitous in finance worldwide.

For five years, Li's formula, known as  a Gaussian copula function, looked like an unambiguously positive breakthrough, a piece of financial technology that allowed hugely complex risks to be modeled with more ease and accuracy than ever before. With his brilliant spark of mathematical legerdemain, Li made it  possible for traders to sell vast quantities of new securities, expanding financial markets to unimaginable levels.

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Enter Li, a star mathematician who grew  up in rural China in the 1960s. He excelled in school and eventually got a master's degree in economics from Nankai University before  leaving the country to get an MBA from Laval University in Quebec. That was followed by two more degrees: a master's in actuarial science  and a PhD in statistics, both from Ontario's University of Waterloo. In 1997 he landed at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, where his  financial career began in earnest; he later moved to Barclays Capital and by 2004 was charged with rebuilding its quantitative analytics team.

Li's trajectory is typical of the quant era,  which began in the mid-1980s. Academia could never compete with the enormous salaries that banks and hedge funds were offering.  At the same time,...   -clip- Li has been notably absent from the current debate over the causes of the crash. In fact, he is no longer even in the US. Last year, he moved to Beijing (!) to head up the risk-management department of China International Capital Corporation. In a recent conversation, he seemed reluctant to discuss his paper and said  he couldn't talk without permission from the PR department. In response to a subsequent request, CICC's press office sent an email saying that Li was no longer doing the kind of work he did in his previous job and, therefore, would not be speaking to the media.



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