Quant Life in Singapore
Singapore is a tiny city-state. Despite its diminutive
size, Singapore has considerable financial muscle. It has
been rated the fourth most active foreign exchange trading
hub, and a major wealth management center in Asia, with
funds amounting to almost half a trillion dollars,
according to the Monitory Authority of Singapore. This
mighty financial clout has its origins in a particularly
pro-business atmosphere, world class (well, better than
world class, in fact) infrastructure, and the highly
skilled, cosmopolitan workforce--all of which Singapore is
rightfully proud of.
Among the highly skilled workforce are scattered a hundred
or so typically timid and self-effacing souls with bulging
foreheads and dreamy eyes behind thick glasses. They are
the Singaporean quants, and this short article is their
story.
Quants command enormous respect for their intellectual
prowess and mathematical knowledge. With flattering
epithets like "rocket scientists" or simply "the brain,"
quants silently go about their jobs of validating pricing
models, writing C++ programs and developing complicated
spreadsheet solutions.
But knowledge is a tricky thing to have in Asia. If you are
known for your expertise, it can backfire on you at times.
Unless you are careful, others will take advantage of your
expertise and dump their responsibilities on you. You may
not mind it as long as they respect your expertise. But,
they often hog the credit for your work and present their
ability to evade work as people management skills. And
people managers (who may not actually know much) do get
better compensated. This paradox is a fact of quant life in
Singapore. The admiration that quants enjoy does not always
translate to riches here.
This disparity in compensation may be okay. Quants are not
terribly interested in money for one logical reason--in
order to make a lot of it, you have to work long hours. And
if you work long hours, when do you get to spend the money?
What does it profit a man to amass all the wealth in the
world if he doesn't have the time to spend it?
Besides, quants seem to play by a different set of rules.
They are typically perfectionist by nature. At least, I am,
when it comes to certain aspects of work. I remember once
when I was writing my PhD thesis, I started the day at
around nine in the morning and worked all the way past
midnight with no break. No breakfast, lunch or dinner. I
wasn't doing ground-breaking research on that particular
day, just trying to get a set of numbers (branching ratios,
as they were called) and their associated errors
consistent. Looking back at it now, I can see that one day
of starvation was too steep a price to pay for the
consistency.
Similar bouts of perfectionism might grip some of us from
time to time, forcing us to invest inordinate amounts of
work for incremental improvements, and propelling us to
higher levels of glory. The frustrating thing from the
quants' perspective is when the glory gets hogged by a
middle-level people manager. It does happen, time and
again. The quants are then left with little more than their
flattering epithets.
I'm not painting all people managers with the same unkindly
stroke; not all of them have been seduced by the dark side
of the force. But I know some of them who actively hone
their ignorance as a weapon. They plead ignorance to pass
their work on to other unsuspecting worker bees, including
quants.
The best thing a quant can hope for is a fair compensation
for his hard work. Money may not be important in and of
itself, but what it says about you and your station in the
corporate pecking order may be of interest. Empty epithets
are cheap, but it when it comes to showing real
appreciation, hard cash is what matters, especially in our
line of work.
Besides, corporate appreciation breeds confidence and a
sense of self-worth. I feel that confidence is lacking
among Singaporean quants. Some of them are really among the
cleverest people I have met. And I have traveled far and
wide and met some very clever people indeed. (Once I was in
a CERN elevator with two Nobel laureates, as I will never
tire of mentioning.)
This lack of confidence, and not lack of expertise or
intelligence, is the root cause behind the dearth of
quality work coming out of Singapore. We seem to keep
ourselves happy with fairly mundane and routine tasks of
implementing models developed by superior intelligences and
validating the results.
Why not take a chance and dare to be wrong? I do it all the
time. For instance, I think that there is something wrong
with a Basel II recipe and I am going to write an article
about it. I have published a physics article in a
well-respected physics journal implying, among other
things, that Einstein himself may have been slightly off
the mark! See for yourself at http://TheUnrealUniverse.com.
Asian quants are the ones closest to the Asian market. For
structures and products specifically tailored to this
market, how come we don't develop our own pricing models?
Why do we wait for the Mertons and Hulls of the world?
In our defense, may be some of the confident ones that do
develop pricing models may move out of Asia. The CDO guru
David Li is a case in point. But, on the whole, the
intellectual contribution to modern quantitative finance
looks disproportionately lopsided in favor of the West.
This may change in the near future, when the brain banks in
India and China open up and smell blood in this niche field
of ours.
Another quality that is missing among us Singaporean
parishioners is an appreciation of the big picture.
Clichés like the "Big Picture" and the "Value Chain"
have been overused by the afore-mentioned middle-level
people managers on techies (a category of dubious
distinction into which we quants also fall, to our constant
chagrin) to devastating effect. Such phrases have rained
terror on techies and quants and relegated them to
demoralizing assignments with challenges far below their
intellectual potential.
May be it is a sign of my underestimating the power of the
dark side, but I feel that the big picture is something we
have to pay attention to. Quants in Singapore seem to do
what they are asked to do. They do it well, but they do it
without questioning. We should be more aware of the
implications of our work. If we recommend Monte Carlo as
the pricing model for a certain option, will the risk
oversight manager be in a pickle because his VaR report
takes too long to run? If we suggest capping methods to
renormalize divergent sensitivities of certain products due
to discontinuities in their payoff functions, how will we
affect the regulatory capital charges? Will our financial
institute stay compliant? Quants may not be expected to
know all these interconnected issues. But an awareness of
such connections may add value (gasp, another managerial
phrase!) to our office in the organization.
For all these reasons, we in Singapore end up importing
talent. This practice opens up another can of polemic
worms. Are they compensated a bit too fairly? Do we get
blinded by their impressive labels, while losing sight of
their real level of talent? How does the generous
compensation scheme for the foreign talents affect the
local talents?
But these issues may be transitory. The Indians and Chinese
are waking up, not just in terms of their economies, but
also by unleashing their tremendous talent pool in an
increasingly globalizing labor market. They (or should I
say we?) will force a rethinking of what we mean when we
say talent. The trickle of talent we see now is only the
tip of the iceberg. Here is an illustration of what is in
store, from a BBC report citing the Royal Society of
Chemistry.
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National test set by Chinese education
authorities for pre-entry students As shown in the
figure, in square prism ABCD-A1B1C1D1, AB=AD=2, DC=2?3,
A1=?3, AD?DC, AC?BD, and foot of perpendicular is
E,
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Prove: BD?A1C
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Determine the angle between the two planes
A1BD and BC1D
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Determine the angle formed by lines AD and
BC1 which are in different planes.
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Diagnostic test set by an English university for
first year students In diagram (not drawn to scale),
angle ABC is a right angle, AB = 3m BC = 4m
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What is the length AC?
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What is the area of triangle ABC
(above)?
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What is the tan of the angle ABC (above) as
a fraction?
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The end result of such demanding pre-selection criteria is
beginning to show in the quality of the research papers
coming out of the selected ones, both in China and India.
This talent show is not limited to fundamental research;
applied fields, including our niche of quantitative
finance, are also getting a fair dose of this oriental
medicine.
Singapore will only benefit from this regional infusion of
talent. Our young nation has an equally young
(professionally, that is) quant team. We will have to
improve our skills and knowledge. And we will need to be
more vocal and assertive before the world notices us and
acknowledges us. We will get there. After all, we are from
Singapore--an Asian tiger used to beating the odds.
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