Financial Engineering: The Evolution of a Profession
By Tanya S. Beder and Cara M. Marshall
()
About this ebook
FINANCIAL ENGINEERING
Financial engineering is poised for a great shift in the years ahead. Everyone from investors and borrowers to regulators and legislators will need to determine what works, what doesn't, and where to go from here. Financial Engineeringpart of the Robert W. Kolb Series in Financehas been designed to help you do just this. Comprised of contributed chapters by distinguished experts from industry and academia, this reliable resource will help you focus on established activities in the field, developing trends and changes, as well as areas of opportunity.
Divided into five comprehensive parts, Financial Engineering begins with an informative overview of the discipline, chronicling its complete history and profiling potential career paths. From here, Part II quickly moves on to discuss the evolution of financial engineering in major marketsfixed income, foreign exchange, equities, commodities and creditand offers important commentary on what has worked and what will change. Part III then examines a number of recent innovative applications of financial engineering that have made news over the past decadesuch as the advent of securitized and structured products and highly quantitative trading strategies for both equities and fixed income. Thoughts on how risk management might be retooled to reflect what has been learned as a result of the recent financial crisis are also included.
Part IV of the book is devoted entirely to case studies that present valuable lessons for active practitioners and academics. Several of the cases explore the risk that has instigated losses across multiple markets, including the global credit crisis. You'll gain in-depth insights from cases such as Countrywide, Société Générale, Barings, Long-Term Capital Management, the Florida Local Government Investment Pool, AIG, Merrill Lynch, and many more.
The demand for specific and enterprise risk managers who can think outside the box will be substantial during this decade. Much of Part V presents new ways to be successful in an era that demands innovation on both sides of the balance sheet. Chapters that touch upon this essential topic include Musings About Hedging; Operational Risk; and The No-Arbitrage Condition in Financial Engineering: Its Use and Mis-Use.
This book is complemented by a companion website that includes details from the editors' survey of financial engineering programs around the globe, along with a glossary of key terms from the book.
This practical guide puts financial engineering in perspective, and will give you a better idea of how it can be effectively utilized in real- world situations.
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Financial Engineering - Tanya S. Beder
Introduction
Tanya Beder
Chairman, SBCC and SBCC Group Inc.
Cara M. Marshall
Queens College of the City University of New York
The past three decades have been a remarkable period for innovation. This is no less true, and probably truer, for financial innovation. No prior period of equal length has ever witnessed anything that even comes close. This innovation has included amazing advances in financial theory, computational capability, new product design, new trading processes, new markets, and new applications. In fact, each of these innovations has supported and reinforced the others. In the early 1990s, practitioners and academics alike began to recognize that this spate of innovation was not just a passing fad. Rather, something fundamental had changed. Indeed, something had, and the new profession known as financial engineering emerged. These think-out-of-the box, often technologically and/or quantitatively sophisticated, individuals are the drivers behind the new finance.
All periods of innovation are traumatic. The old, only grudgingly, makes way for the new. Adapting to a new environment takes effort, and not all will survive. For example, many floor traders on stock, futures, and options exchanges fought tooth and nail to prevent the introduction of electronic trading platforms. But, in the end, the new platforms won out. Why? Because they are better—they are faster, less error prone, and they lead to tighter bid-ask spreads, which means lower transaction costs for investors.
Innovation is not without its problems. Good ideas often have unintended consequences. Cell phones, for example, have made it possible for anyone to reach almost anyone else at any time in real time. How can that be bad? But cell phones and their associated capabilities, such as text messaging, have increased road hazards, become an annoyance to anyone dining out, attending a theater, or just trying to read in peace on the commute home. Similarly, financial innovation has often had unintended consequences. The financial crisis that began in 2007 and, some would say, continues as of this writing, has been blamed in part on the securitization of subprime mortgages and other financial innovations. Securitization dramatically changed the way mortgage lending worked. It brought huge amounts of capital to the mortgage market, making it faster and easier for would-be homebuyers to secure the necessary financing for their purchase. How could making it easier to achieve the American Dream possibly be bad? But securitization has had unintended consequences. Many mortgage originators changed their focus from managing their credit risk to originating as much volume as possible with little regard to credit quality. Securitization had made credit risk someone else's problem.
The years ahead will be a period of great change for financial engineering. Investors, borrowers, regulators, supervisors, boards of directors, legislators, and individuals alike will need to determine what to keep—and what to throw out. This book is designed to help readers do precisely that. Whether experienced or new to financial engineering, this book will help you focus on not only established activities but also the areas of greatest opportunity and need.
For those who are new to financial engineering, Part I of this book (Chapters 1 through 3), provides a history of financial innovation and the commensurate growth of financial engineering as a profession. In this same section, various types of financial engineering occupations are discussed, but not to the point of being exhaustive. Also in this section, financial engineering curricula and programs are discussed. Many of these programs carry a label other than financial engineering (e.g., quantitative finance, risk management, mathematical finance, and so forth), but they are nevertheless subsets within the broader field of financial engineering. A website, www.wiley.com/go/bedermarshall/ (password: kolb) has been provided to allow the prospective student to get a good sense of which universities offer financial engineering-related programs and what these programs contain. The data is not exhaustive because our survey did not reach all universities with financial engineering-related programs, some of the schools we sent our survey to did not respond in a timely fashion, and new programs are being introduced regularly. We apologize to any university that feels they have a program that should have been included. We invite them to contact Survey@sbccgroup.com to have their institution's programs added to our data base.
The chapters included in this book are organized around several key themes.
THEME 1: DERIVATIVES WILL CONTINUE TO PLAY A CRITICAL, VALUABLE, AND PERMANENT ROLE IN THE GLOBAL CAPITAL MARKETS
According to the Bank for International Settlements, notional principal for derivatives outstanding peaked in 2007 at US$ 1,444 trillion (all types combined). This number declined significantly during the global financial crisis, but by the latter part of 2009 it was again rising rapidly. Because this figure is notionals outstanding, it can be misleading. Many prefer to measure the size of the market in terms of gross market value, which is the cost of replacing existing contracts. Gross market value is typically a small fraction of the notionals outstanding. Nevertheless, by any measure, the derivatives markets are massive in size and, by all accounts, are once again growing rapidly.
Although some derivatives, most notably futures, have a very long history, as chronicled in the financial engineering history chapter, many of the more important derivatives have been around for less than 35 years. These include swaps, most types of options, caps, floors, collars, and the more complex combinations thereof. After the introduction of these latter derivatives, innovation took off and continues at breakneck speed. Today financial derivatives are a core part of the global capital markets. They continue to assist borrowers to achieve lower-cost funding, investors to achieve greater rates of return and/or more desirable risk/reward tradeoffs, and financial and nonfinancial firms to better manage risks linked to interest rates, currencies, commodities, equities, credit, weather, and greenhouse gases, among others. With such rapid growth it is not surprising that the drivers of some derivatives strategies and financially-engineered products had some problems. Despite these, and the fact that some pioneers of financial engineering feel they unwittingly helped to make an atom bomb in the financial markets with the advent of certain types of securitized products, we believe that derivatives will continue to play a critical, valuable, and permanent role in the global capital markets.
Part II (Chapters 4 through 9) examines each of the major markets, one per chapter. Not surprisingly, derivatives play an important role in each of these markets. Specifically Part II addresses, sequentially, financial innovation and engineering associated with the fixed-income markets, the mortgage market more narrowly, the equity markets, the foreign exchange markets, the commodity markets, and the credit markets.
THEME 2: RISK MEASUREMENT AND MANAGEMENT WILL CHANGE SUBSTANTIALLY FOLLOWING LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE MELTDOWN THAT MANIFESTED IN 2007
Since the onset of the financial meltdown, losses have been realized by almost every type of firm on every continent. Trillions in taxpayers’ funds have been deployed by countries around the world to try to stabilize firms and markets. Disclosed losses involved not only exotic or highly leveraged securities, but simple products as well. As we continue to work our way through these losses, it is clear that risk measurement and risk management failed to identify some exposures. Further, many supervisors, boards of directors, senior managers, and other overseers were seduced by a dangerous sense of calm, placing too much faith in data derived during a relatively benign period in the history of the capital markets.
Revising risk measurement methodologies and risk management techniques will be an important focus of the financial engineering community over the next decade. So-called once-in-100-year events have occurred all too frequently, thereby exposing serious flaws in current techniques for identifying and managing risks. Further, the risk that a model's value may be different from that ultimately obtained in the market reared its head globally and without prejudice as to continent or type of firm, costing trillions. Those who assumed that engaging in multiple activities in multiple geographic markets would provide so-called natural diversification lost breathtaking sums; and different financial markets and different types of financial services were found to be much more interconnected during times of stress than their risk measurement systems predicted.
Part III (Chapters 10 through 16) examines a number of recent important innovative applications of financial engineering that have made news over the past decade and that will continue, in our opinion, to do so in the years ahead. Important among these are the advent of securitized products—both those that contributed to the financial crisis and those that did not; structured products, which have become an important new bank funding tool; the importance of obtaining independent valuation of financially-engineered products; and new, highly-quantitative trading strategies for both equities and fixed income. Also included in Part III are some thoughts on how risk management might be retooled to reflect what has been learned as a result of the financial crisis and how new financial products may make it possible to manage the risks associated with macroeconomic uncertainties.
THEME 3: FINANCIALLY-ENGINEERED SECURITIES AND STRATEGIES WILL EVOLVE TO INCLUDE MORE TRANSPARENCY AND BETTER WARNING LABELS
The successful financial engineer is always re-evaluating what has gone before and how it might be done better in the future. To fully appreciate what can go wrong, one has to be willing to examine failure. Indeed, one can often learn more from failure than from success.
Part IV (Chapters 17 through 22) deals with case studies in which some sort of operational failure led to a financial calamity. In all cases these were large failures, some of which led to the demise of the companies with which they were associated. In other cases, the companies were able to survive—often thanks to an acquisition or government bailout. We are grateful to Algorithmics for allowing us to draw on their extensive and proprietary data base of operational risk case studies. We are particularly grateful to Penny Cagan, formerly of Algorithmics, for assembling these case studies for incorporation in this book.
The cases that are included discuss risk themes that have led to losses across multiple market environments, including what we have experienced recently. These include the stories of Countrywide, Northern Rock, Société Général, Barings, Allied Irish/Allfirst, Allstate, Long-Term Capital Management, the state of Florida's Local Government Investment Fund, Orange County (California), American International Group (AIG), and Merrill Lynch.
THEME 4: THE DEGREE TO WHICH INCREASED REGULATION WILL STYMIE FINANCIAL ENGINEERING AND INNOVATION IS UNCERTAIN
Not all financially-engineered securities pose the same risks. Some are inherently riskier than others. Some anxiety-ridden legislators, regulators, academics, and supervisors have taken the extreme step of suggesting that all engineered securities should be purged from some firms’ activities. Other stakeholders have made the mistake of assuming that without engineered securities, risk going forward will be under control. Sadly, not only would many firms with purged activities have greater residual risk, but they are likely to be noncompetitive in the global arena.
We do not think it is advisable to put the securitization genie back into the bottle, and we agree with the stakeholders and overseers who have taken a more constructive approach. Greater transparency and disclosure regarding financially-engineered securities are at the center of how these firms plan to continue to use these products while learning from past losses.
In Part V (Chapters 23 through 29), we address special topics of interest to various segments of the financial engineering community and those who would employ the services of financial engineers. This is a rather eclectic mix. We begin by taking a look at compensation and performance fees. There is little doubt that risk-sensitive compensation frameworks will evolve as a direct result of the crisis as supervisors, government officials, company executives, and directors work to overcome the consequences of what many now view as too many short-term and one-sided incentives. We then continue with thoughts on hedging and the implications of hedge accounting for the volatility of corporate earnings; issues in operational risk and legal risk; the porting of alpha in the current market environment; and the essence of the no-arbitrage condition in valuation and its role in financial engineering.
Although the technological and transaction bridges across markets are well established, the social and political structures supporting cross-border and cross-institution transactions will take years to catch up. Through the meltdown, linkages in the global economy revealed that a shock in a key sector or country can reverberate rapidly through the world. The untoward results were increasingly accompanied by the question of whether government intervention became too lax, and whether supervisors did adequate jobs (including regulators, senior managers, boards of directors, and other overseers). Further, the question of whether protectionism and/or regionalism will overtake ongoing globalization has started to appear with increasing frequency in the debate. We close this book (Chapter ) with some thoughts on the role of the public sector in the management of systemic risk.
At this writing, the world continues its de-risking and de-leveraging. In April of 2010 the IMF revised downward to US$2.3 trillion its earlier estimate of global write-downs by banks. This number exceeds considerably the new capital raised by banks during the same period. The substantial losses by investors in certain types of financially engineered credit instruments and the incineration of trillions of dollars of value have resulted in the nationalization of numerous financial firms and global companies plus breathtaking bailouts by governments around the world. While some instruments are well into their write-down cycles (for example, residential mortgage-backed securities), other instruments are just beginning a likely write-down cycle (for example, commercial mortgage-backed securities and prime residential mortgage-backed securities). Given the huge injections of funds, we encourage you to think about whether governments and stakeholders (i.e., taxpayers) will demand higher levels of regulation and oversight in exchange for those bailout monies. There certainly seems a palpable probability that a reduction in the freedom of global banks is possible as countries and/or regions focus on limiting damage from future crises.
We have included several appendices at the end of this book (Part VI) that we believe can be useful to the beginning student looking forward to a career in financial engineering. These appendices include a brief look at some of the computational and information technology tools available to the financial engineer (Appendix A); and, as already noted, an overview of the survey of financial engineering programs and programs with a financial engineering component (Appendix B).
The authors wish to specially thank John F. Marshall for his insights, advice, and experience drawn from the publication of numerous past books and articles on many of these topics. His input was invaluable to the completion of this book. The authors also wish to thank the staff at SBCC Group Inc. for research and fact checking throughout numerous drafts. We also thank the entire team at John Wiley & Sons for their efforts and support. Finally, and perhaps foremost, we thank the innumerable executives, directors, regulators, risk managers, traders, investors, borrowers, academics and students who have shared their experiences and their challenges over the past three decades.
Part I
Overview
Chapter 1. The History of Financial Engineering from Inception to Today
Chapter 2. Careers in Financial Engineering
Chapter 3. A Profile of Programs and Curricula with a Financial Engineering Component
Chapter 1
The History of Financial Engineering from Inception to Today*
Tanya Beder
SBCC Group Inc.
WHAT IS FINANCIAL ENGINEERING?
Financial engineering may be broadly defined as the development and creative application of innovative financial technology. Financial technology includes financial theory, quantitative techniques, financial products, and financial processes. At a microeconomic level, the motivation behind financial engineering is to produce profits for the innovators by finding better ways to address society's needs. At a macroeconomic level financial engineering helps improve the allocation of scarce resources. Allocation of resources is the fundamental objective of any economic system. Indeed, financial engineering epitomizes Joseph Schumpeter's view of capitalism as creative destruction.
New products replace old products, new theory improves on old theory, and new processes supplant old processes.
Financial engineering borrows heavily and liberally from other disciplines, which helps explain why the field has attracted people from across the scientific spectrum. The key to understanding financial engineering is understanding innovation in all of its dimensions and turning this innovation into practical solutions. While, in some sense, financial engineering has been with us since the innovation of money, financial engineering has not, until quite recently, been recognized as a profession. What has changed, more than anything else, is the pace of innovation.
The history of financial engineering is presented in the segments illustrated in Exhibit 1.1.
Exhibit 1.1 Financial Engineering Time Line
Source: SBCC Group Inc.
WHY DIDN'T FINANCIAL ENGINEERING START SOONER?
Markets and some financial functions have been around for thousands of years. There is evidence, for example, that the Romans may have invented checking as early as 352 B.C. By the year 1750 the basic financial firms were established to take deposits; make loans; write insurance; provide investments (savings and pension products); intermediate (checking, crossing trades, brokering); underwrite; distribute; and facilitate trade. From the 1700s until about 1970 (more than 200 years), the development of financial firms was continuous and done at a manageable pace. But the period was also one of frequent violent upheaval, as wars repeatedly ravaged nations and populations. New firms were born and others went out of business, but the basic functions of banks, insurance companies, asset managers, company pension funds, central banks, brokers, and dealers did not change radically. Most firms had monoline business models, and the primary business was the intermediation of capital.
As summarized in Exhibit 1.1, the pace of innovation was slow, but there were notable developments in the four decades leading up to the inception of financial engineering. Harry Markowitz published his seminal work on portfolio theory in the 1950s; the first Eurobonds were issued in the early 1960s, and certificates of deposit were introduced in the late 1960s. There were advancements in technology, but most were not broad-based consumer products: Chester Carlson invented xerography (photocopying) in 1938; the first computer (the ENIAC) was unveiled in the 1940s; Bell Systems revealed the transistor that would revolutionize telecommunications in 1947; the first modem enabling communication between machines was developed in the late 1950s; and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) launched the first communications satellite in 1962. As the 1960s ended, Texas Instruments developed the first handheld calculator, which retailed for $2,000.
The decades after World War I right through to the early 1970s were a period of ever-increasing financial market regulation. This period included episodes of currency instability, devastating inflation in some countries, the Great Depression, World War II, and the rebuilding of Europe and Japan in the wake of that global calamity. Substantial regulation was put in place to promote the safety and soundness of individual countries’ financial systems. Most regulations adopted were rule-based by category/type of firm versus by function. In addition, there were important agreements made between countries; for example, fixed exchange rates were established between major countries at the Bretton Woods Conference of 1944. The interest rates paid by savings banks were capped. Commodity prices were kept artificially low by many governments. Hence, there was little price volatility to manage. Also of note is that fewer than 350 companies worldwide had assets in excess of US$500 million, so most financial activities were local (within home countries) rather than global. Losses by financial firms during this era were either credit-based (for example, the failure of the Austrian bank Credit Anstalt that led to substantial overnight foreign exchange losses for counterparties) or operational-based (for example, the United States’ paper crunch during which trading volume outstripped settlement capabilities, leading to the failure of 160 members of the New York Stock Exchange).
Toward the end of the period, glimmers of deregulation and technology advances laid the groundwork for the beginning of financial engineering.
INCEPTION AND THE EARLY STAGES (1970 TO 1997)
During the latter part of the twentieth century, four forces worked together to drive the separation between the past and the present businesses of financial firms:
1. Technology
2. Globalization
3. Deregulation
4. Risk intermediation
By 1970 the business of financial firms had begun to change radically and irrevocably. Banks, insurance companies, funds, central banks, brokers, dealers, government entities, and others faced difficult new risks and challenges to their profitability. As summarized in Exhibit 1.2, interest rates and currencies were deregulated, and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) was established—all leading to substantial new volatilities to manage. Increasingly, global corporations struggled as well to manage their income statements, balance sheets, and raw material costs.
Exhibit 1.2 Early Stages (1970–1997)
Table 2-aTable 2-bTable 2-cTable 2-dTable 2-eTable 2-fTechnology was the first force. Until the advent of personal computers and parallel processing in the 1980s, most technology was too slow to be utilized in the context of the capital markets. Prior to the advances in technology, mathematical techniques long used in the sciences could only be used theoretically in finance due to the inability to wait hours or days for answers. As this period progressed, many techniques whose power was only dreamed about in the early 1900s became employable practically by dealers, end users, regulators, and others. This created not only greater opportunities to see both risk and reward, but also a shortened cycle of innovation.
Dramatic comparisons are evident—a list of all innovations in the early 1970s began to be matched by those in a single quarter. With the exceptions of commodity futures and currency and commodity forwards, derivatives markets that were nonexistent in 1970—for example, interest rate swaps and currency swaps—topped $50 trillion outstanding by the end of 1998.¹ Structured notes, collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs), and asset-backed securities (ABS) were all introduced. Advances in technology changed how firms and individuals participated in the capital markets. Transactions became ever less hard copy and local
and ever more electronic and global.
The contrasts make the beginning of this period sound like the Dark Ages: At the beginning of this period, we did not have the personal computer; instead, handwritten spreadsheets and calculators were used to perform calculations, and pools of typists painstakingly produced single documents on wide-carriage typewriters. We did not have desktop publishing; instead, typesetters placed lead type in individual rows, and many an all-nighter was spent proofreading the lines as they were changed. We did not have mortgage calculators to perform interest and principal calculations; instead, bankers looked up monthly payment amounts in books that contained tables of principal and interest for different rates.
Globalization was the second force. With technology arrived e-mail and satellite communications. Information flow became cheap and virtually instantaneous, and cross-border transactions were executed in seconds versus days at the beginning of the period. A related result was that capital market events began to transcend borders, sometimes causing sympathy crashes or other market moves as traders tried to anticipate one market's reaction to another's event. Yet another change was that financial firms began to shop the world's markets for the best deal, not only for themselves but also for their customers. At the beginning of the period, a U.S. corporation looked to its lead bank or to the domestic debt and equity markets to raise capital, and it was rare to issue a Eurobond, a Samurai bond, or a Yankee bond. During this period, the list of capital-raising alternatives grew much longer, and it became standard to include the public and private European and Asian capital markets, as well as new financial lenders such as mutual funds. Often, new markets were used in combination with derivatives so that borrowers or investors could swap back or transform the currency or interest rate basis to a preferred structure. In addition, borrowers and investors alike began to use futures and over-the-counter derivatives, notably caps, collars, and floors, to alter the risk/return structures of assets and liabilities.
Deregulation was the third force. In 1971, the Bretton Woods system, which, through government intervention, had worked remarkably well in maintaining stable exchange rates since the end of World War II, collapsed. This was followed by a dramatic increase in the volatility of exchange rates. As this period began, Canada and Germany had begun interest rate deregulation. In 1979, Paul Volcker, succumbing to the powerful forces of disintermediation brought on by inflation, freed short-term U.S. interest rates. Banks would now pay market-determined rates rather than government-mandated rates. In 1980, the United States began a process of deregulating its savings, commercial, and investment banks. France deregulated many financial institutions in 1981, and Great Britain deregulated securities firms with the so-called Big Bang in 1986. The oil shocks of the 1970s, and again later during the Gulf War, rather than being managed by governments, were left to market forces. As a result of deregulation and the other forces, the currency, interest rate, commodity, and stock markets experienced unprecedented volatility.
The fourth force was the expansion of financial institutions’ businesses to include the intermediation of risk in addition to the intermediation of capital. No longer would monoline financial intermediaries handle all aspects of the borrowing and lending transaction. During this period, not just banks but mutual funds, insurance companies, brokers, government agencies, and credit unions became ever more likely to stand in between, not only to move capital, but also to move risk from suppliers to users. Large world events further drove the need to manage risk: For example, the historical volatility of oil had a high of about 30 percent but increased to 300 percent during the Gulf War. In other words, the likelihood that oil prices would change over a given period of time increased tenfold. Globalization and technology had enabled the proliferation of products to manage such risks: Analysis and computations previously untenable in a volatile environment had grown feasible. Financial firms stepped in to design and execute risk management products, not only to manage their own risks but also to service their customers.
The collapse of Bretton Woods (1971); the oil shocks (1973, 1979, and 1990); a major stock market crash (1987); and dramatic currency moves (notably the Japanese yen, Italian lira, and Mexican peso in the 1990s) made it clear to corporations and financial institutions that active risk management was essential to their financial health and competitiveness. Whereas it had been acceptable to most shareholders in 1970 for corporations to announce increased sales but decreased profits due to currency exchange losses or volatile raw materials costs, this was no longer the case by the end of the period. Shareholders demanded that corporations employ risk/reward management tools to keep risk within acceptable bounds.
The now-infamous savings and loan (S&L) crisis provides an excellent example of how the new products offered by financial firms could be used to better control risk. In the late 1960s the business of S&Ls was, essentially, as it had been since the emergence of these institutions in the United States after World War II. Simply stated, S&Ls invested short-term depositors’ funds in long-term mortgage loans to homeowners. This asset-liability mismatch caused few problems while interest rates were low and stable. However, when interest rates rose, disintermediation became inevitable. A deregulation of interest rates in 1979 became a necessity for the United States to remain competitive in the new global playing field. As interest rates tripled to over 20 percent in 1979–1980, S&Ls had to raise rates paid on their deposits beyond those received on their existing mortgage loan portfolios, creating huge losses that the industry could not sustain. A government bailout resulted, and the need for greater risk management was clear. By the end of this period, simple interest rate swaps, one of the most common risk management products today, and engineered securities in the form of CMOs and structured deposits, assisted S&Ls in managing their risks profitably.
The interaction of these forces was at many times painful but also helpful to financial firms and corporations. On the painful side, at the same time that many financial firms struggled with default crises in less-developed country debt, high-yield debt, and commercial real estate, deregulation reduced profits or produced negative profit margins. On the helpful side, many new innovative products, markets, and delivery channels opened to financial institutions through technology and others’ deregulation. In addition, the need to manage increased volatility, combined with the ability to deploy technology within the time frame of traded markets, provided the means to create new multitrillion-dollar markets such as risk advisory services, derivatives, and financially engineered securities, which bolstered profits and risk management capabilities at a critical time.
In summary, during this phase, financial firms were very much in the business of responding to their own needs to manage risk and clients’ needs to manage risk. They created new products, notably derivatives (at first called synthetics
) and financially-engineered securities. They added risk intermediation to the business of capital intermediation. During this period, the financial engineer was born and financial engineering became its own profession. Organizations such as the International Association of Financial Engineers² were founded; finance curriculum expanded to include derivatives, risk management, new products, and hedging techniques. There was such a need for trained quants that dozens of graduate programs were launched at major universities to produce financial engineers. Over the three decades leading up to 1998, firms like J.P. Morgan, Swiss Bank Corporation (SBC) (later to become part of UBS, AG), Deutsche Bank, Equitable Companies, Fidelity Funds, Citibank, Goldman Sachs, and some new boutiques emerged in powerful positions.
But others were not as lucky or as quick to acknowledge the sea change in their businesses and markets or to manage the changing risk profiles of the capital markets and their firms. Spectacular downfalls ensued for Kidder Peabody, Barings Bank, Granite Funds, Daiwa's U.S. Bank, Toyo Shinkin Bank, Nissan Mutual Life Insurance, Confederation Life, the Maxwell Companies’ pension funds, Drexel Burnham Lambert, Continental Illinois, and Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI), plus many regional savings and loans and credit unions in Japan, Great Britain, Switzerland, and the United States. A lucky few were forgiven by the capital markets long before their woes were over (notably Orange County, California). A few survived with the assistance of governments or via takeovers by stronger partners, but many did not.
During this period, it was no longer possible to distinguish financial institutions merely by their names. For example, insurance companies and mutual funds both made loans and offered check writing (traditional banking functions), while banks began to write insurance and offer families of mutual funds (traditional insurance and investment management functions). The overlap and expansion of businesses changed how top firms were measured. For example, 10 to 20 years earlier the top banks had been measured by total assets, total loans, and total capital. In the new era, rankings were expanded to include a host of additional measures such as best foreign exchange house,
best risk management adviser,
best equity dealer,
best commodity house,
and so forth. Another contributor to the transformation of finance was the emergence of off-balance-sheet businesses for many financial institutions. According to the Bank for International Settlements, by March 1995 the notional amount of derivatives outstanding exceeded $40 trillion and translated into over $3 trillion in market exposure. By the mid-1990s, some financial institutions had more off-balance-sheet business than on-balance-sheet business. A good example was Bankers Trust, which, as the eighth-largest U.S. bank in 1994, had about $70 billion in total assets and over $1 trillion notional amount in off-balance-sheet items. Less than 20 years earlier, the reverse had existed: Off-balance-sheet businesses were at that time dominated by on-balance-sheet businesses for all financial firms.
During this period, central banks and national governments faced increasing difficulty in monitoring off-balance-sheet exposures and in resolving large-scale, cross-border financial problems such as the freezing of Iranian assets, BCCI, Barings, Olympia & York, and Lloyd's due to the lack of a uniform commercial code across nations. Trading blocks in North America, Europe, and Asia emerged, driven by the need for regions with similar economic interests to cooperate and address such issues. A notable turning point in the history of financial engineering came with three financial calamities: the Asian financial crisis of 1997–1998, followed by the Russian financial crisis, followed by the downfall of Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) in 1998. All of these events raised fears of a global economic meltdown. Also notable at the end of 1998 was the creation of the financial behemoth, Citigroup, that challenged the separation of banking and insurance under the then-in-effect Glass-Steagall Act.
THE MASSIVE GROWTH PERIOD (1998 TO 2006)
The Asian financial crisis began with the financial collapse of Thailand's currency, the Thai baht. Currencies across Asia slumped at the same time that equity and other asset markets devalued. These events, in turn, caused a precipitous increase in borrowing. Widespread civil unrest and rioting forced President Suharto to resign after being at the helm in Indonesia for 30 years. A slump in world commodity prices triggered a Russian financial crisis. At the time, oil and gas, timber, and metals accounted for 80 percent of Russia's exports. A collapse of Russia's currency, bond, and equity markets followed. On the heels of the Russian financial crisis, Long-Term Capital Management lost almost $5 billion in less than four months. Fearing potential interlinkages, the Federal Reserve supervised a forced bailout of the hedge fund by major banks and broker-dealers.
Exhibit 1.3 Massive Growth (1997–2006)
These crises led to a new focus on enterprise risk management and the creation of the so-called enterprise risk manager.
As summarized in Exhibit 1.3, there also was rapid innovation in credit-linked derivatives, plus financially-engineered instruments. During this period, interest rate swaps and currency swaps grew sixfold to almost $350 trillion,³ and credit default swaps grew from about $350 billion in 2001 to over $45 trillion. The economic environment during this period was one of remarkable stability and included flush liquidity, relatively low volatility, low interest rates, rising equity and real estate prices, and easy-to-obtain leverage. The capital markets absorbed several large market corrections, including substantial accounting scandals (e.g., Enron and Parmalat) and the bursting of the tech bubble. During this period, the landscape of financial firms changed substantially:
Citigroup's Sanford Weill became known as the shatterer of Glass-Steagall
in the United States.
Around the world, massive deregulation of financial firms commenced as the business models of investment banks, commercial banks, and broker-dealers converged with private equity, alternative asset management, and insurance.
Several financial firms rode the wave of the massive derivatives and structured products growth, and so joined the ranks of top derivatives and structured products behemoths, including UBS, ING, HBC, Barclays, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, and American International Group (AIG), among others.
Whereas hedge funds were almost exclusively based in the United States at the beginning of the period, hedge funds in Asia grew to $110 billion, and in Europe to $400 billion, by the end of 2006.
Central banks and sovereign wealth funds in Asia and the Middle East accumulated an estimated $7 trillion to $10 trillion in assets, becoming increasing purchasers of U.S. debt and net suppliers of global capital.
Asset managers such as Fidelity, which had taken over five decades to grow to a few hundred billion in assets under management (AUM), more than tripled their assets during the period to AUMs measured in the trillions.
Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae, Bank of America, Washington Mutual, Ameriquest, and others became the leaders in sectors of the U.S. subprime mortgage market.
Quantitative trading grew substantially, due to the success of Renaissance Technologies LLC and many commodity-trading advisors (CTAs).
G-7 investors massively increased their global presence, focusing particularly heavily on Brazil, Russia, India, and China (BRIC) and other emerging markets.
Multibillion-dollar so-called club deals (multiple private equity firms pooling their assets to take over huge firms) became common.
Whereas the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had played a substantial role in the Asian and Russian financial crises, it was fighting for relevancy as the strong economic environment continued into 2006.
During this period, enterprise risk reporting added many new dimensions, especially to capture correlation risk (the risk that multiple asset classes or exposures will deteriorate in concert). Further, value at risk (VaR—a widely used measure of the risk of loss), stress tests, and Monte Carlo simulations continued as day-to-day features of a best-practice risk management program. A notable turning point came in 2007 with the subprime mortgage crisis that exposed pervasive weaknesses in the measurement of risk, particularly with respect to how interconnected many institutions had become. Consequently, the debate about national and global financial re-regulation focused the spotlight on systemic risk.
THE RATIONALIZATION PERIOD (2007 TO DATE, ONGOING)
Expansionary monetary and fiscal policies, combined with substantial deregulation of capital markets and financial firms, had facilitated explosive growth in financial engineering. While there were some signs of a weakening residential mortgage market in the United States in 2005, as well as weakening loan markets that had earlier fueled hugely appreciated assets in other countries (for example, Ireland, England, and Spain), the beginning of the current financial crisis commonly is linked to the United States’ subprime mortgage defaults that began in earnest in 2007. Early in the crisis, a huge focus was placed on credit derivatives, securitization, high leverage, off-balance-sheet financing, and failures in specific and enterprise risk management. As the crisis continues to unfold, additional focus has been placed on pro-cyclical regulatory, accounting, and risk management practices; also, compensation practices have been placed under the spotlight as strong contributors to the global crisis (for financial and nonfinancial firms alike). The question of whether government regulation had become too lax and whether supervisors did adequate jobs (including regulators, senior managers, boards of directors, and other overseers) is at the heart of current discussion. And the question of whether protectionism and/or regionalism will overtake ongoing globalization appears with increasing frequency in the debate.
At the same time, the practical result has been de-risking and de-leveraging, with global write-downs by banks at $1.5 trillion at the end of 2009 and with IMF estimating in April 2010 that the global bank write-downs will reach $2.3 trillion by the time the crisis is completely resolved. This is considerably more than banks raised in new capital during the same period. The substantial losses by investors in certain types of financially engineered credit instruments, and the incineration of trillions of dollars of value, have resulted in the nationalization of numerous financial firms and global companies plus staggering bailouts by governments around the world. While some instruments are well into their write-down cycle (for example, residential mortgage-backed securities), other instruments are just beginning a likely write-down cycle (for example, commercial mortgage-backed securities and prime residential mortgage-backed securities). Given the breathtaking injections of funds, we pose the question: Will governments and stakeholders (i.e., taxpayers) demand higher levels of regulation and oversight in exchange for those bailout monies? There certainly seems a palpable probability that a reduction in the freedom of global banks is possible as countries and/or regions focus on limiting damage from future crises. Another key factor to consider will be how governments, consumers, and firms respond, determining whether the BRICs/Middle East/sovereign wealth funds emerge with more than 50 percent of the global gross domestic product (GDP) pie after global growth recovers. This will be the first era during which these countries/regions may dominate the global capital markets.
Financial engineering has been forced to enter a rationalization phase. Most firms are in the process of reviewing, rethinking, and/or retooling the procedures, policies, assumptions, and techniques underneath both their specific and enterprise risk management. Regulators, supervisors, and legislators are in the process of conducting substantial reviews and hearings regarding systemic risk and existing regulatory frameworks. They are conducting investigations into firms that failed or were nationalized. There is little doubt that as Exhibit 1.4 is updated, there will be substantial additions to the Regulatory Change
and Risk Innovation
columns.
Exhibit 1.4 Rationalization Period (2007–Present)
Some of the questions that will shape this new phase in the evolution of financial engineering are:
Will increased regulation stifle financial engineering innovation and the over-the-counter derivatives markets?
How will transparency be increased?
How will the accountability of overseers (regulators, boards of directors, senior management, and others) be increased?
What (permanent) changes will be made to compensation models at firms (both financial and nonfinancial)?
How can data and information sharing, plus cooperation, be improved across central banks, regulators, and policy makers?
Will the financial utility functions (for example, monetary flows) be separated from financial risk-taking functions (for example, riskier proprietary trading)?
How will additional regulation or other changes impact the cost structure of financial firms?
Will stakeholders during this era focus more on revenue and earnings growth (as in prior eras) or more on stable and well-funded balance sheets?
How will the mix of short-term and long-term funding change, and what will be the impact on the activities of firms?
How will consumers change savings patterns, and if savings rise substantially, how severely will this rise impact growth?
Will ratings agency debt ratings be viewed as accurate measures of credit risk?
How will the aging populations in the established economies impact the next generation of financially engineered products, especially those linked to insurance and pension products?
What are the new risk measurement models that will be added to value at risk, stress testing, and simulation to improve risk management?
How can multiple models be used to conduct more thorough analysis of worst cases or expected losses?
How did common regulatory, accounting, and risk management approaches contribute to pro-cyclicality and the systemic issues?
Are there new measures of liquidity risk that reveal exposures better?
How should stress tests be revised, given their weaknesses as set tests that look at past moves and/or have fixed parameters designed for specific positions or strategies?
How will too large to fail
or too linked to fail
change the global landscape of firms?
What will replace agency ratings as a tool for assessing risk?
How will firms better align compensation and excessive risk taking?
Which firms will successfully focus on new business models and business strategies and adapt to the substantial changes in the next phase of the capital markets and financial engineering, and which will lose their way by focusing too narrowly on their response to the financial crisis?
HISTORICAL READINGS
Here is a comprehensive list of relevant readings that you can locate if you are interested:
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NOTES
* © Copyright 2010 by Tanya Beder, chairman, SBCC Group Inc. The author wishes to thank Helen Lu for her valuable assistance for portions of the research regarding this chapter.
1. Source: International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (www.ISDA.org)
2. www.iafe.org.
3. Source: International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc. (www.ISDA.org)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Tanya Beder is currently chairman of SBCC in New York and SBCC Group Inc. in Connecticut. SBCC, founded in 1987, has a broad base of hedge fund, global bank, private equity, asset management, financial services, and corporate clients. From 2004 to 2006, Tanya was CEO of Tribeca Global Management LLC, Citigroup's USD 3 billion multi-strategy hedge fund, and from 1999 to 2004 was managing director of Caxton Associates LLC, a USD 10 billion investment management firm. Tanya sits on several boards of directors, including a major mutual fund complex and the National Board of Mathematics and their Applications. She has taught courses at Yale University's School of Management and Columbia University's Graduate School of Business and Financial Engineering. She speaks and guest lectures globally. Tanya has published in the Journal of Portfolio Management, Financial Analysts Journal, Harvard Business Review, and the Journal of Financial Engineering. She holds an MBA in finance from Harvard University and a BA in mathematics and philosophy from Yale University.
Chapter 2
Careers in Financial Engineering
Spencer Jones
SBCC Group, Inc.
INTRODUCTION
The evolution and growth of financial engineering as a profession has been accompanied by an ever-increasing demand for qualified job candidates. The field is interdisciplinary and had existed under a number of different, sometimes inappropriate, labels for some time before industry and academia finally settled on the more accurate descriptor of financial engineer.
The roots of financial engineering trace back to major theoretical contributions made by financial economists during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. They include names like Harry Markowitz, Merton Miller, Franco Modigliani, Eugene Fama, William Sharpe, Myron Scholes, Fischer Black, Robert Merton, Mark Rubinstein, John Cox, Stephen Ross, and many others that walked with them or followed the trail they pioneered. These men brought a new set of tools and a more scientific approach to finance to our understanding of financial markets, financial products, and financial relationships. However, as important as these contributions were in planting the seeds for a new profession, the blossoming of that profession did not occur until the financial markets began to experience an influx of highly skilled professionals from other, traditionally more quantitative, disciplines. These new entrants to the financial markets included ever more physicists, mathematicians, statisticians, astrophysicists, various types of engineers, and others who shared a love for quantitative rigor. Some of these people came to finance because they reached a point in their lives when they simply wanted to do something different. Others came because they were displaced by a changing world.
As the years passed, the initially fragmented discipline began to coalesce into an increasingly recognized and respected profession with its own professional organizations and recognized leaders. As the field evolved, it attracted some of the most respected minds from academia, both in traditional finance programs at respected business schools but also at leading engineering schools. Many of these people were drawn to financial engineering by the nascent markets for derivatives and later by the advent of securitization. While the opportunities and the variety of employment roles that are available to prospective financial engineers have increased dramatically over the years, the popular press all too often names the people engaged in the profession as quants
(short for quantitative analyst). Nevertheless, not all financial engineering careers require an advanced study of mathematics. While many do, and some quantitative training certainly does help, there are many niches to be filled in which mathematics plays a less important role.
There are, today, a wealth of career opportunities available to competent financial engineers. As the field, first defined and given a name only about twenty years ago, has grown, over 150 universities and colleges have introduced courses and/or degree and certificate programs devoted to dimensions of financial engineering.¹ In this chapter, we present a framework to examine the range of career opportunities available.
In the most recent survey of financial engineering graduates, performed by the International Association of Financial Engineers (IAFE), career objectives showed a remarkable homogeneity. Of all the students surveyed, 56 percent of graduates wanted to work in a field related to derivatives pricing or trading, with a further 21 percent pursuing opportunities within risk management. This survey was performed in advance of the credit crisis. What is most surprising is that—with the extensive variety of opportunities available—over three-quarters of graduates were interested in such a concentrated group of fields. With over 5,000 financial engineering students now graduating annually,² it is important to more fully appreciate the wide set of opportunities outside of derivatives.
At first glance, it is understandable why students are drawn towards derivatives. Derivatives have become the archetype of financially engineered securities. They can be found in almost every market sector. But derivatives are far from the only area in which financial engineers are needed. The growth of automated trading strategies, for example, is but one of the many new opportunities in the markets where financial engineers are much in demand, as was securitization before that. With the massive spread of complex securities, opportunities and challenges abound in managing the risks faced by firms. With an estimated 750,000³ risk practitioners across all industries, risk management remains one of the largest areas in which financial engineers can build a career.
The purpose of this chapter is to give the reader a sense of the breadth of financial engineering careers and to make it a bit easier to understand what skill sets are sought when the student reads job-posting notices. For example, within the realm of job postings titled Quantitative Analyst,
there is great variety in the types of analysis to be performed and in the nature of the employers. Quantitative analysts, and therefore financial engineers, are not simply in demand for roles on the CDO structuring desk within global banks. Rather, they are in demand across a broad spectrum of firms and in a large number of roles. The requirement and demand for quantitative analytical skills bridges across from banks, financial services firms and insurance companies to corporations, service companies, governments, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). The skills developed during a financial engineering program are understood to apply far beyond the technical scope of financial instruments. Employers seek the strong analytical skills instilled during the student's program of study. These characteristics are also why the profession continues to draw people from other analytical backgrounds, applying their skills to financial problems.
The job functions of individual financial engineers can vary dramatically despite similar job titles, firms, and even business divisions. This will become noticeable if the reader reviews the details in a number of similar-sounding job postings. The similarities will generally be immediately apparent, but there will also be many subtle differences. A prospective candidate should be able to quickly identify the variety of businesses that employ financial engineers. Yet, beneath this, there are numerous roles that include programming, financial modeling, and data analysis. For some new entrants to the industry this can be challenging. To assist you, we have attempted to present the roles available by highlighting key components. Our hope is that, by doing this, you will be able to use this chapter in conjunction with job descriptions to better understand the nature of the role advertised.
At the conclusion of this chapter the reader will find tables that present a summary of the types of roles and opportunities available to a financial engineering graduate. When we first sat down to write this chapter, we were tempted to simply populate the tables with the role Quantitative Analyst.
This would have served to make the point of how widespread quantitative analytical roles have become—originally, of course, in the securities and derivatives markets, but later spreading to such things as analyzing data trends for superstore purchases, marketing analysis, and even journalism. While we have tried to illustrate the range of employment opportunities that require financial engineering skills, the areas we have identified below should not be considered exhaustive by any means. The range of employment opportunities will continue to evolve—along with financial engineering as a profession.
A WORLD OF OPPORTUNITIES
It is a challenge to illustrate the opportunities available to job candidates who have qualified themselves in financial engineering, whether through a formal course of study or through sufficient applicable experience. To assist the reader in understanding the variety of career paths available, we have developed the diagram in Exhibit 2.1. We envision a series of concentric circles,