Modular Monolith - a Practical Alternative to Microservices @ Devoxx UK 2024
Balancing quantitative models with common sense 2008
1. Balancing Technological Change with Intuition Nick Wade Director, Asia Marketing Northfield Information Services Asia Ltd. [email_address] +81 (0)3 5403 4655 +61 (0)2 9238 4284
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Notas do Editor
There is so much data available – but what is actually relevant? Data-mining attractive, easy, simple… and useless. Key questions are rarely asked – assumptions behind underlying data, sources of data, etc Information/Noise – in the eye of the beholder: our STM detrends series (short term focus),. Whereas LTMs incorporate trend. A long-term investor wants to know about real information incorporated in price movements, whereas a trader can profit from making a market in securities where there is a lot of noise trading
There are a great many disadvantages that come with high frequency data that tend to outweigh the benefits, except in some rather unusual situations.
5% of assets, but 30% of volume
Note our work on direct property risk modelling – consider an office / hotel / etc as a portfolio of junk bonds. Yields a risk number much higher than NACREIF but lower than S&P 500… intuitive result.
Non-linear payoff patterns – can’t capture that with tracking error.
Mahalanobis distance Implied correlation – limitation: only one statistic, says nothing about skew or kurtosis of cross-sectional distribution “ Statman & Scheid” – correlation is not a good measure of the benefits of diversification Causal Induction and Confirmation – Bradley and Fitelson – confirmation “ Interpreting the First Eigenvalue of a correlation matrix” Togetherness Average correlation Review other cutting-edge or novel techniques
AHP: questions e.g. what is your income, what is your age, how old are your kids? For each answer to each question there is a ranking of most to least suitable asset classes. The questions are also ranked in importance We can do some matrix math using the answers to each question and the ranking of the questions to give us a “most suitable” asset allocation. IMPORTANT: based on more than one criteria. Existing systems try to convert answers into one parameter (risk tolerance) and implicitly therefore assume all investor utility same.