http://www.math.nyu.edu/financial_mathematics/content/02_financial/02.html
Quantitative & Mathematical Finance
Financial mathematics is the application of mathematical methods to the solution of problems in finance. (Equivalent names sometimes used are financial engineering, mathematical finance, and computational finance.) It draws on tools from applied mathematics, computer science, statistics, and economic theory. Investment banks, commercial banks, hedge funds, insurance companies, corporate treasuries, and regulatory agencies apply the methods of financial mathematics to such problems as derivative securities valuation, portfolio structuring, risk management, and scenario simulation. Quantitative analysis has brought efficiency and rigor to financial markets and to the investment process and is becoming increasingly important in regulatory concerns. As the pace of financial innovation increases, the need for highly qualified people with specific training in financial mathematics intensifies.
Finance as a sub-field of economics concerns itself with the valuation of assets and financial instruments as well as the allocation of resources. Centuries of history and experience have produced fundamental theories about the way economies function and the way we value assets. Mathematics comes into play because it allows theoreticians to model the relationships between variables and represent randomness in a manner that can lead to useful analysis. Mathematics, then, becomes a tool chest from which researchers can draw to solve problems, provide insights and make the intractable model tractable.
Mathematical finance draws from the disciplines of probability theory, statistics, scientific computing and partial differential equations to provide models and derive relationships between fundamental variables such as asset prices, market movements and interest rates. These mathematical tools allow us to draw conclusions that can be otherwise difficult to find or not immediately obvious from intuition. Especially with the aid of modern computational techniques, we can store vast quantities of data and model many variables simultaneously, leading to the ability to model quite large and complicated systems. Thus the techniques of scientific computing, such as numerical computations, Monte Carlo simulation and optimization are an important part of financial mathematics.
A large part of any science is the ability to create testable hypotheses based on a fundamental understanding of the objects of study and prove or contradict the hypotheses through repeatable studies. In this light, mathematics is a language for representing theories and provides tools for testing their validity. For example, in the theory of option pricing due to Black, Scholes and Merton, a model for the movement of stock prices is posited, and in conjunction with basic theory which states that a riskless investment will receive the risk-free rate of return, the researchers reasoned that a value can be assigned to an option that is independent of the expected future value of the stock.
This theory, for which Scholes and Merton were awarded the Nobel prize, is an excellent illustration of the interaction between math and financial theory, which ultimately led to a surprising insight into the nature of option prices. The mathematical contribution was the basic stochastic model (Geometric Brownian motion) for stock price movements and the partial differential equation and its solution providing the relationship between the option's value and other market variables. Their analysis also provided a completely specified strategy for managing option investment which permits practical testing of the model's consequences. This theory, which would not have been possible without the fundamental participation of mathematics, today plays an essential role in a trillion dollar industry.
Interesting celebration of Scholes and mainstream quant for a faculty website where Prof. Taleb is a distinguished member.
http://www.fooledbyrandomness.com/
Taleb's cool and seemingly honest website.
""My major hobby is teasing people who take themselves & the quality of their knowledge too seriously & those who don’t have the courage to sometimes say: I don’t know...." (You may not be able to change the world but can at least get some entertainment & make a living out of the epistemic arrogance of the human race).
What I do: I am interested in how to live in a world we don’t understand very well –in other words, while most human thought (particularly since the enlightenment) has focused us on how to turn knowledge into decisions, I am interested in how to turn lack of information, lack of understanding, and lack of “knowledge” into decisions –how not to be a “turkey”. My last book The Black Swan (and the 4th Quadrant papers) drew a map of what we don’t understand; my current work focuses on how to domesticate the unknown "what to do in a world we don't understand". "
http://www.whosdatedwho.com/celebrities/people/dating/brad-pitt.htm
Great resource for researching archetypes. The righ corner's "snapshot" allows you to search celebrities using useful information like year of birth, height, and ethnicity.
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