Read My Life as a Quant Online
Authors: Emanuel Derman
The right way to engage with a model is, like a fiction reader or a really great pretender, to temporarily suspend disbelief, and then push it as far as possible. The success of the theory of options valuation, the best model economics can offer, is the story of a Platonically simple theory, taken more seriously than it deserves and then used extravagantly, with hubris, as a crutch to human thinking. “If a fool would persist in his folly, he would become wise,” wrote Blake in
The Marriage of Heaven and Hell
. This is what quants have done with options theory.
A little hubris is good. But then, when you're done modeling, you must remind yourself that you're theorizing about I's, and that, though God's world can be divined by principles, humanity prefers to remain mysterious. Catastrophes strike when people allow theories to take on a life of their own and hubris evolves into idolatry. Somewhere between these two extremes, a little north of common sense but still south of idolatry, lies the wise use of conceptual models. It takes judgment to draw the line.
Meanwhile, fundamental physics and its visions of ten-dimensional strings seem to get steadily more arcane, and quantitative finance becomes progressively more refined and detailed. Being a scientist can sometimes be depressing. Surrounded by younger versions of yourself, you are constantly confronted by the mismatch between the dreams of youth and the facts of maturity.
I once read J.P.S. Uberoi's biography of Goethe,
1
one of the last people to make contributions to both art and science. Goethe's
Theory of Colours
is a unified examination of the interior and exterior characteristics of light and color, conducted with an awareness of the observer himself. According to Uberoi, scientists tend to regard Goethe as a poet who strayed beyond his proper place. His critics said he mistakenly thought of Nature as a work of art, being qualitative and personal where he should have been quantitative and impersonal. But Goethe was not so naive as to think that Nature is a work of art, wrote Uberoi. Rather, he believed that the
description
of our knowledge of Nature should be a work of art.
I like to think in Goethean terms of what we do in quantitative finance: We try to make as beautiful and truthful a description as we can of what we observe. We're involved in intuiting, inventing, or concocting approximate laws and patterns. We combine both art and science in creating understanding. We use our intuition, our scientific knowledge and our pedagogical skills to paint a picture of how to think qualitatively, and then, within limits, quantitatively, about the world of human affairs, and in so doing, we influence and are influenced by other people's thoughts. There's not much more one could ask for in this life without being wishful.
1
J.P.S. Uberoi,
The Other Mind of Europe
:
Goethe as a Scientist
, Oxford University Press, Delhi (1984).
Acknowledgments
I am most indebted to Pamela van Giessen, my editor at John Wiley & Sons, Inc., who, several years ago, let me persuade her that writing a book about what it's like to be a quant was a good idea. From then on she provided inspiration, enthusiasm, guidance, and advice, on the big picture as well as on details. I'm thankful for her interest and patience; it is very unlikely I would have seen this endeavor through to its end without her.
Jennifer MacDonald at Wiley also provided useful help, as did the people at PV&M Publishing Solutions, in particular Joanna Pomeranz, Matt Kushinka, and Gabriella Kadar.
The kind encouragement I received from family, friends, and, sometimes, from relative strangers who later became friends, played a truly large part in my completing this book. Writing is a lonely pleasure, and a small amount of other people's enthusiasm can have a disproportionately large and beneficial impact. I am pleased to thank Beverly Bell, Steve Blaha, Richard Cohen, Nancy Cohen, Joshua Derman, Shulamit Derman, Sonya Derman, Michael Goodkin, Marc Groz, Ruth Jowell, Mike Kamal, Robert Kiernan, Mark Koenigsberg, Bob Long, Helga Nagy, Nassim Taleb, and Don Weingarten. Their positive words had more effect on me than they may realize, and I'm grateful to them. I am especially thankful to Ray Bacon, who encouraged me and offered helpful comments on the manuscript.
Finally, above all, I am pleased to thank my wife Eva, who patiently and carefully read and commented on large parts of the manuscript, and give me thoughtful suggestions, good advice, and moral support throughout its writing.
About the Author
Emanuel Derman is a principal and Head of Risk at Prisma Capital Partners and a professor and Director of the Program in Financial Engineering at Columbia University. He was formerly a managing director at Goldman, Sachs & Co., which he joined in 1985 after an initial career in academic life and at AT&T Bell Laboratories. He is the co-creator of the widely used Black-Derman-Toy interest rate model and the Derman-Kani local volatility model. Among his many awards and honors, he was named the SunGard/IAFE Financial Engineer of the Year in 2000 and was appointed to the Risk Hall of Fame in 2002. He has a PhD in theoretical physics from Columbia University and is the author of numerous articles in elementary particle physics, computer science, and finance.
Index
A
A Programming Language (APL)
Academic jobs, scarcity
Academics, isolation
Achyuthuni, Rao
Adams, Scott
Adjustable Rate Mortgage (ARM)
Adler, Dennis
Adler, Margot
AI.
See
Artificial intelligence
Akers, Karen
Algorithmics (financial software company)
Allen, Paul
Allstate (company)
Amazon.com
American Express merger
American Finance Association
American Mathematical Society
American mortgage market, size
American Physical Society
American put value, closed-form solution (search for)
American Stock Exchange, options conference, Amex
Analytics (company)
Anderson, P.W.
Animorphic (company)
Anthroposophists
APL.
See
A Programming Language
Applied mathematics
Applied physics, employment
Arab oil embargo (1973)
Arb group.
See
Meriwether
Area 10.
See
Bell Laboratories
Area 90 (Network Systems).
See
Bell Laboratories
ARM.
See
Adjustable Rate Mortgage
Aron, J.
Art of Computer Programming, The
(Knuth)
Arthur D. Little and Co.
Artificial intelligence (AI), Goldman approach
Asian call option, purpose
Aspen Center for Physics
Asymetrix (company)
Atomic physics
AT&T.
See
Bell Laboratories
AT&T Technical Journal
At-the-money option
At-the-money put
Auguries of Innocence
(Blake)
AutoBond (Diller), creation
Average call option, purpose
Avery, Oswald
B
Baby Bells, divestiture from AT&T
Back-of-the-envelope methods
Backus, John
Backus Normal Form (BNF)
Baker, Howard
Bank of America, partnership.
See
D.E. Shaw & Co.
Bankers Trust
Bannister, Roger
Bardeen, John
Barfield, Owen
Barrier options
BDT.
See
Black-Derman-Toy
Bear Stearns
Bég, Mirza Abdul Baqi
Bell, Beverly
Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science
Bell Laboratories (AT&T)
Bell System Technical Journal
Bell Telephone Companies
Bellcore (company)
Bellow, Saul
Bergier, Alex
Berk, Jonathan
Berkeley University
Bernstein, Jeremy
Beta decay
Bettelheim, Bruno
Bezos, Jeff
BGM.
See
Brace-Gatarek-Musiela
Big Bang
Binomial model
Binomial trees.
See also
Implied binomial tree
Bio-informatics programs
BK.
See
Black-Karasinski
Black, Fischer
Black box computerized statistical arbitrage
Black-Derman-Toy (BDT) model
Black-Karasinski (BK) model
Black-Scholes calculator, usage
Black-Scholes distribution
Black-Scholes formalism
Black-Scholes formula
Black-Scholes implied volatilities
Black-Scholes model coding
Black-Scholes options pricing model
Black-Scholes single-volatility framework
Black-Scholes stock option model, modifications for bonds
Black-Scholes value
Black-Scholes-Merton
Blaha, Steve
Blake, William.
See also Songs of Innocence and Experience, Auguries of Innocence
Blavatsky, Madame
Bloomberg, Michael
Bloomberg (financial software company)
BNF.
See
Backus Normal Form
Bohr, Niels
Bond options
Bond Portfolio Analysis (BPA)
Bonds
Bookstaber, Rick
Borror, Jeff
Bosco
BPA.
See
Bond Portfolio Analysis
Brace-Gatarek-Musiela (BGM) model
Brattain, Walter H.
Brenner, Menachem
Bronx High School of Science
Brookhaven National Laboratories
Bubble chamber20
Buckwalter, Alan
Buddhism, living principles
Business Analysis Systems Center
C
C (programming language)
C++ (programming language)
C (program), generation
C programming (test)
CAC-30
California Institute of Technology (Caltech)
Call options.
Callable bonds
Cambodia, American invasion
Cambridge Tripos examination
Cape Town.
See
University of Cape Town
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
CAPM.
See
Capital Asset Pricing Model
Casio, information-storing watch
C-ATS (company)
CDC IXIS (company)
Celestial Seasonings Tea Company
CERN.
See
European Center for Nuclear Research
Chang, Lay Nam
Chaos: Making a New Science
(Gleick)
Chargaff, Erwin
Charmed quark
Chase, Chevy
Chogyam Trungpa
Chomsky, Noam
Christ, Norman
CIR.
See
Cox-Ingersoll-Ross
Circumstance, force
Citibank
Civilization, discontents
Clarendon Labs
Clark, Wesley
CNN
Cobol, usage
Cobrinik, Zach
Cockney rhyming
Collective behavior
Columbia University