管家婆免费开奖大全

Tianyi Jia, Zhenhua Lin and Luhui (Luke) Gan (photo courtesy Erin Provost/Waterfront International)

Foreseeing the future of oil prices

Multidisciplinary student teams design trading strategies at the first Quantathon

How do you predict the future trading price for a barrel of oil? You may be more likely to succeed if you have a statistician, a financial expert and computer scientist working together. 

Waterfront International Ltd. (WIL), a quantitative finance research firm specializing in developing computer-based statistical trading strategies, challenged 管家婆免费开奖大全 students to develop an automated trading strategy for oil prices 鈥 in only 48 hours. 

鈥淭he programming 鈥 or hacking 鈥 community is known for its intensive, problem-solving approach,鈥 said Helen Kontozopoulos, coordinator and instructor of entrepreneurship鈥恟elated initiatives in the department of computer science. 鈥淨uantathon was designed to challenge 管家婆免费开奖大全 students from a diverse range of computational studies.鈥 

鈥淲e use technology to solve complicated finance problems and rely on people with backgrounds in computer science, statistics, mathematics and finance,鈥 said Bob Suriwka, Waterfront International鈥檚 chief executive officer. 鈥淲e approached the departments of computer science, statistical sciences and Rotman to create with us a contest that mirrors what we do in our business.鈥

The multidisciplinary teams, 27 in all, were given a quantity of physical crude oil. They then applied futures contract prices for oil and current market rates to maximize their return-to-risk ratio and forecast the oil price. The groups used heuristics, simulation, linear regression, optimization, machine learning and time series analysis to design their oil trading strategy. 

鈥淭he teams worked really hard at this hackathon kind of question, but as it applies to a different field, in finance,鈥 said Suriwka.

Quantathon鈥檚 question proved highly challenging. At the end of the second day, only 18 of the 27 teams were left standing with completed solutions. A shortlisted group of teams were given an opportunity to present their results to a panel of judges. 

Department of statistical sciences doctoral students Luhui (Luke) Gan, Tianyi Jia and Zhenhua Lin, took home the top $7,500 prize courtesy of Waterfront International. 

鈥淲e study a lot of theory in finance, statistics and computer science,鈥 said Gan. 鈥淲e鈥檙e very interested in real-world applications and wanted to see how theory can be used.鈥 

鈥淣owadays there鈥檚 a big data area, where people want to able to find the answer within and you need a computer program to help you find the answer,鈥 said Jia, who credits teammate Lin for bringing his prior programming experience to the team.  

鈥淭he problem was very cool and realistic,鈥 said Lin.

鈥淚t was fun. It was hard. It was open-ended,鈥 said runner-up, Mufan (Bill) Li, a fourth-year undergraduate student in the Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering (ECE), who formed a team with ECE classmate Mengye Ren and fourth-year physics student Japinder (JP) Nijjer

Li and Nijjer said they were attracted to Quantathon based on their work experience in quantitative finance. Their second-place finish netted the team $5,000. 

Third place of $2,500 went to a team of students from UTSC: Lucas Huang (finance), Veronica Ng (statistics) and David Szeto (computer science).

鈥淲e were impressed by the amount of turnout we had for the competition, the quality of student work and the amount of time put in,鈥 said Suriwka. 

鈥淣ot everyone can win, but everyone did a great job.鈥

Waterfront International plans to expand Quantathon in 2016 to additional Ontario cities.

Nina Haikara is a writer with the department of computer science. 

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