Humint Events Online: Physicists on Wall Street

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Physicists on Wall Street

This is interesting-- something I didn't know about but makes sense that this goes on:
They are known as “quants” because they do quantitative finance. Seduced by a vision of mathematical elegance underlying some of the messiest of human activities, they apply skills they once hoped to use to untangle string theory or the nervous system to making money.

This flood seems to be continuing, unabated by the ongoing economic collapse in this country and abroad. Last fall students filled a giant classroom at M.I.T. to overflowing for an evening workshop called “So You Want to Be a Quant.” Some quants analyze the stock market. Others churn out the computer models that analyze otherwise unmeasurable risks and profits of arcane deals, or run their own hedge funds and sift through vast universes of data for the slight disparities that can give them an edge.

Still others have opened an academic front, using complexity theory or artificial intelligence to better understand the behavior of humans in markets. In December the physics Web site arXiv.org, where physicists post their papers, added a section for papers on finance. Submissions on subjects like “the superstatistics of labor productivity” and “stochastic volatility models” have been streaming in.

Quants occupy a revealing niche in modern capitalism. They make a lot of money but not as much as the traders who tease them and treat them like geeks. Until recently they rarely made partner at places like Goldman Sachs. In some quarters they get blamed for the current breakdown — “All I can say is, beware of geeks bearing formulas,” Warren Buffett said on “The Charlie Rose Show” last fall. Even the quants tend to agree that what they do is not quite science.


I can see the appeal here for math-oriented people. But clearly a major part of the economic collapse is the massive over-leveraging by investors-- and it seems many of these "quants" are doing nothing but enabling this very destructive behavior. It's a shame these people's skills can't be used more constructively. But ultimately this just goes to show the corrosive power of money...

1 Comments:

Blogger K.L. Ashley said...

The traders also use the complex algorithms provided by the academics in math, so we read over the last couple of years.

7:30 AM  

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