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                  THE 
                  FIELDS INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH IN MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES 
                  20th 
                  ANNIVERSARY 
                  YEAR  | 
               
               
                 
                  
                    
                       
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                          Fields 
                            Quantitative Finance Seminar  
                            2012-2013 
                             
                             
                            held 
                            at the Fields Institute, 222 College St., Toronto 
                             
                            Map 
                            to Fields  
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              The Quantitative Finance Seminar has been a centerpiece of the Commercial/Industrial 
              program at the Fields Institute since 1995. Its mandate is to arrange 
              talks on current research in quantitative finance that will be of 
              interest to those who work on the border of industry and academia. 
              Wide participation has been the norm with representation from mathematics, 
              statistics, computer science, economics, econometrics, finance and 
              operations research. Topics have included derivatives valuation, 
              credit risk, insurance and portfolio optimization. Talks occur on 
              the last Wednesday of every month throughout the academic year and 
              start at 5 pm. Each seminar is organized around a single theme with 
              two 45-minute talks and a half hour reception. There is no cost 
              to attend these seminars and everyone is welcome. 
               
              To be informed of speakers and titles for upcoming seminars and 
              financial mathematics activities, please subscribe to the Fields 
              mail list. 
             
            
            
  
     
       Upcoming 
        Talks 2012-2013  
        Talks 
        streamed live at FieldLive  
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      TBA | 
     
     
      |  Past 
        Talks 2012-2013 (Video archive of Talks) | 
     
     
      April 24 
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         Carol Alexander, University of Sussex (presentation) 
          Nice Moment Swaps 
           
         
          This talk presents the very latest research on moment swaps, starting 
            with a simple new definition of realised variance that yields discretely 
            monitored variance swaps with none of the usual pricing errors (viz. 
            from jumps and from the use of an integral rather than a sum in the 
            derivation of fair value). We then generalize the set of moment characteristics 
            which satisfy Neubergers aggregation property and explain how 
            the fair values of such moment swaps may be obtained by pricing some 
            fundamental contacts (e.g. the log and entropy contracts) based on 
            vanilla option prices. Our methodology relies solely on the assumption 
            of an arbitrage-free market and is therefore relevant for a wide range 
            of applications. 
            (Jointly with Johannes Rauch). 
           
         
        Sergey Nadtochiy, University of Michigan (presentation) 
          Weak Reflection Principle and Static Hedging of Barrier Options  
        
The classical Reflection Principle is a technique that allows one 
            to express the joint distributionof a Brownian motion and its running 
            maximum through the distribution of the process itself. It relies 
            on the specific symmetry and continuity properties of a Brownian motion 
            and, therefore, cannot be directly applied to an arbitrary Markov 
            process. We show that, in fact, there exists a weak formulation of 
            this method that allows us to recover the same results on the joint 
            distribution of a Brownian motion and its running maximum. We call 
            this method a Weak Reflection Principle and show that it can be extended 
            to a large class of Markov processes, which do not posses any symmetry 
            properties and are allowed to have jumps. We demonstrate various applications 
            of this technique in Finance, Computational Methods, Physics, and 
            Biology. In particular, we show that theWeak Reflection Principle 
            provides an exact solution to the problem of hedging Barrier options 
            with a semi-static position in European type claims. Our method allows 
            us to find such hedging strategies in the diffusion- and L´evy-based 
            models. In addition, we show how it can be used to establish robust 
            static hedging strategies that are model-independent. We illustratethe 
            theory with numerical examples. 
           
         
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      Mar 27 
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         Albert S. (Pete) Kyle, University of Maryland (presentation) 
          (video 
          archive of talk) 
          Market Microstructure Invariance: Theory and Empirical Tests  
        
Using the intuition that financial markets transfer risks in business 
            time, we define market microstructure invariance as the 
            hypothesis that the size distribution of risk transfers (bets) 
            and transaction costs of their implementation are constant across 
            assets and time. A meta-model suggests that microstructure invariance 
            is ultimately related to granularity of information flow. Based on 
            a database of 400,000+ portfolio transition trades, we show that quantitative 
            predictions of microstructure invariance concerning bets sizes and 
            transaction costs as functions of observable volume and volatility 
            closely match the data. We calibrate invariants and discuss implications 
            for financial markets.  
         
        Andreea Minca, Cornell University *Talk 
          Cancelled 
          When Do Creditors with Heterogeneous Beliefs Agree to Run? 
         
          We explore, in a multi-period setting, the funding liquidity of a 
            borrower that finances its operations through short term debt. The 
            short term debt is provided by a continuum of agents with heterogeneous 
            beliefs about the prospects of the borrower. In each period, creditors 
            observe the borrowers fundamentals and decide on the amount 
            they invest in its short term debt. We formalize this problem as a 
            coordination game, and we show that there exists a unique reasonable 
            Nash equilibrium. We show that the borrower is able to refinance if 
            and only if the liquid net worth is above an illiquidity barrier, 
            and we explicitly find this barrier in terms of the distribution of 
            capital and beliefs across agents. 
            (joint with Andrey Krishenik and Johannes Wissel). 
         
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      Feb. 27  
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      Ulrich Bindseil, European 
        Central Bank (presentation) 
        Central bank liquidity provision, risk-taking and economic efficiency 
         
          That in financial crises, central banks should become lenders of 
            last resort to the economy, while taking into account fi nancial risk 
            management and moral hazard concerns, is well known ever since the 
            19th century experience of the Bank of England as documented in Bagehot 
            (1873) or King (1936). In this paper, we develop further the relevant 
            trade-o ffs. First, we argue that the credit riskiness of counterparties 
            and issuers is endogenous to central bank's financial crisis measures 
            and the related risk control framework. It is shown that ignoring 
            this can lead to sub-optimal risk management decisions. Second, extending 
            the problem of the central bank from a pure risk management perspective 
            to one considering economic efficiency, the central bank also needs 
            to consider how to avoid to the extent possible (a) defaults of viable 
            but illiquid institutions, and (b) the preservation through central 
            bank lending of loss-making and non-viable institutions. Finally, 
            we formalize these ideas by providing a stylized model capturing the 
            effects of central bank collateral haircuts on both central bank risk-taking 
            and economic efficiency. The model illustrates that (i) central bank 
            risk-taking can decrease or increase when haircuts are increased; 
            (ii) economic efficiency and central bank risk-taking are in many 
            cases non-monotonous functions of haircuts on collateral; (iii) that, 
            as expected, central bank risk-taking and economic efficiency are 
            not necessarily aligned. The model explains why in a financial crisis, 
            in which liquidity shocks become more erratic and the social costs 
            of defaults increase, central banks tend to make the collateral framework 
            less restrictive (CGFS, 2008). 
            Central bank liquidity provision, 
            risk-taking and economic efficiency 
         
        Mike Lipkin (Katama Trading and Columbia University) (presentation) 
          Market turbulence, monetization, and universality. 
         
          Shocks in financial markets create regions of turbulence which are 
            out-of-equilibrium. Prices in this region are frequently monetizable. 
            Are there universal properties? Some of the work presented here was 
            done by Columbia University students in the course Experimental Finance. 
         
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      Feb. 6 
         
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         Julien Guyon, Bloomberg (presentation) 
          (video archive of the talk) 
          Stochastic Volatility's Orderly Smiles  
         
         
          We consider multi-factor stochastic volatility models and derive 
            the volatility smile at order two in the volatility-of-volatility. 
            At this order, the smile is quadratic in log-moneyness and depends 
            on three effective quantities within which the dynamics of the spot 
            and forward variances of any particular model is condensed. We supply 
            explicit expressionsof these quantities for a family of Heston-like 
            models as well as a 2-factor version of the Bergomi model. For this 
            model, comparison with the exact smiles shows good agreement for volatility-of-volatility 
            levels that are typical ofequity underlyings. Finally we derive short 
            term asymptotics and highlight the structural dependence of the level 
            of ATM skew and curvature on the ATM volatility, and we link the decay 
            of ATM skew and curvature for long maturities to the time decay of 
            spot/variance and variance/variance covariance functions. 
         
        Jon Gregory, Solum Financial Partners (presentation) 
          (video archive of the talk) 
          Why CDOs Work 
         
         
          Prior to the beginning of the global financial crisis in 2007, the 
            CDO was a successful financial innovation. However, CDOs have been 
            blamed for causing the crisis, pricing models for CDOs have been heavily 
            criticised, litigation has been rife and investor demand has almost 
            disappeared. All players in the CDO market, notably banks, rating 
            agencies as well as investors have suffered as a result. An obvious 
            question to ask is whether the concept of a CDO is flawed and the 
            market was doomed to eventual failure or if CDOs, like many other 
            financial investments, were simply a casualty of a largely unforeseen 
            and completely unprecedented global financial crisis. In this talk, 
            I provide an answer to this question based on empirical analysis of 
            corporate default rates and a typical CDO structure.  
            
         
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      Nov. 28 
         
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         Paul Ormerod (Volterra Partners LLP) (presentation) 
          (video archive of the talk) 
          Trying to Make Economics a Science: Key Empirical Features of Recessions 
          and Thoughts on How to Explain Them 
         
          The current financial crisis has attracted a huge amount of attention. 
            But economic recessions are not new. There have been over 200 individual 
            examples across the individual Western countries since the late 19th 
            century. Mainstream economic models, with their focus on equilibrium, 
            are quite unable to explain the key empirical features such as distribution 
            of duration and size. How might we go about building models which 
            do? Feedback is essential, and agent based models also allow diversity 
            of behaviour. These seem promising ways of moving forward.  
         
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         Nov. 23 
           
           
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          Peter Carr (Morgan Stanley) (presentation) 
          (video archive of the talk) 
          Risk, Return and Ross Recovery 
         
          The risk return relation is a staple of modern finance. When risk 
            is measured by volatility, it is well known that option prices convey 
            risk. One of the more influential ideas in the last twenty years is 
            that the conditional volatility of an asset price can also be inferred 
            from the market prices of options written on that asset. Under a Markovian 
            restriction, it follows that risk-neutral transition probabilities 
            can also be determined from option prices. Recently, Ross has shown 
            that real-world transition probabilities of a Markovian state variable 
            can be recovered from its risk-neutral transition probabilities along 
            with a restriction on preferences. In recent work with Jiming Yu, 
            we show how to recover real-world transition probabilities in a bounded 
            diffusion context in a preference-free manner. Our approach is instead 
            based on restricting the form and dynamics of the numeraire portfolio. 
             
         
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      Oct. 24 
         
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         Paul Kaplan ( Morningstar) (presentation) 
          (video archive of the talk)  
          Alpha, Beta, and Now... Gamma 
         
          When it comes to generating retirement income, investors arguably 
            spend the most time and effort on selecting 'good' investment funds/managers-the 
            so called alpha decision-as well as the asset allocation, or beta, 
            decision. However, alpha and beta are just two elements of a myriad 
            of important financial planning decisions, many of which can have 
            a far more significant impact on retirement income. We introduce a 
            new concept called "Gamma" designed to quantify the additional 
            expected retirement income achieved by an individual investor from 
            making more intelligent financial planning decisions. Gamma will vary 
            for different types of investors, but in this article we focus on 
            five fundamental financial planning decisions/techniques: a total 
            wealth framework to determine the optimal asset allocation, a dynamic 
            withdrawal strategy, incorporating guaranteed income products (i.e., 
            annuities), tax-efficient decisions, and liability-relative asset 
            allocation optimization. We estimate a retiree can expect to generate 
            29% more income on a "utility-adjusted" basis using a Gamma-efficient 
            retirement income strategy when compared to our base scenario, which 
            assumes a 4% constant real withdrawal and a 20% equity allocation 
            portfolio. This additional income is equiva- lent to an annual arithmetic 
            return increase of +1.82% (i.e., Gamma equivalent alpha), which represents 
            a significant improvement in portfolio efficiency for a retiree. Unlike 
            traditional alpha, which can be hard to predict, we find that Gamma 
            (and Gamma equivalent alpha) can be achieved by anyone following an 
            efficient financial planning strategy. 
             
             
            ***This month's seminar will host one speaker and end at 6:30 p.m. 
           
         
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      Sept. 26 
         
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         Yacine Ait-Sahalia (Princeton University) (presentation) 
          (video archive of the talk) 
           The Term Structure of Variance Swaps, Risk Premia and the Expectation 
          Hypothesis 
         
          We study the term structure of variance swaps, which are popular 
            volatility derivative contracts. A model-free analysis reveals a significant 
            jump risk component embedded in variance swaps. The variance risk 
            premium is negative and has a downward sloping term structure. Variance 
            risk premia due to negative jumps present similar features in quiet 
            times but have an upward sloping term structure in turbulent times. 
            This suggests that short-term variance risk premia mainly reflect 
            investors' fear of a market crash. Theoretically, the Expectation 
            Hypothesis does not hold, but biases and inefficiencies are modest 
            for short time horizons. A simple trading strategy with variance swaps 
            generates significant returns. 
            This is a joint work with Mustafa Karaman and Loriano Mancini. 
         
        Carole Bernard (University of Waterloo) (presentation) 
          (video archive of the talk)  
          Mean-Variance Optimal Portfolios in the Presence of a Benchmark and 
          Application to Fraud Detection 
         
          We first study mean-variance efficient portfolios when there are 
            no trading constraints. Optimal strategies amount to holding a short 
            position in the stochastic discount factor used for pricing. We show 
            that optimal strategies perform poorly in bear markets. We then depart 
            from the traditional setting and assume investors use a stochastic 
            benchmark (linked to the market) as a reference portfolio. Preferences 
            become state-dependent and we are able to accomodate for this. Precisely, 
            we derive mean-variance efficient portfolios when investors aim to 
            achieve a given correlation (or a given dependence structure) with 
            a stochastic benchmark. We also provide bounds on Sharpe ratios and 
            show how these can be useful for fraud detection. For example it is 
            shown that under some conditions it is not possible for investment 
            funds 
            to display negative correlation with the financial market and to have 
            a positive Sharpe ratio. 
           
         
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