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Optimizing Optimization
The Next Generation of Optimization Applications and Theory (Quantitative Finance)

Rating
Format
Hardback, 328 pages
Published
United Kingdom, 14 October 2009

Editor Stephen Satchell brings us a book that truly lives up to its title: optimizing optimization by taking the lessons learned about the failures of portfolio optimization from the credit crisis and collecting them into one book, providing a variety of perspectives from the leaders in both industry and academia on how to solve these problems both in theory and in practice. Industry leaders are invited to present chapters that explain how their new breed of optimization software addresses the faults of previous versions. Software vendors present their best of breed optimization software, demonstrating how it addresses the faults of the credit crisis. Cutting-edge academic articles complement the commercial applications to provide a well-rounded insight into the current landscape of portfolio optimization. Optimization is the holy grail of portfolio management, creating a portfolio in which return is highest in light of the risk the client is willing to take. Portfolio optimization has been done by computer modeling for over a decade, and several leading software companies make a great deal of money by selling optimizers to investment houses and hedge funds. Hedge funds in particular were enamored of heavily computational optimizing software, and many have been burned when this software did not perform as, er, expected during the market meltdown. The software providers are currently reworking their software to address any shortcomings that became apparent during the meltdown, and are eager for a forum to address their market and have the space to describe in detail how their new breed of software can manage not only the meltdown problems but also perform faster and ever before-that is, optimizing the optimizers!! In addition, there is a strong line of serious well respected research on portfolio optimization coming from the academic side of the finance world. Many different academic approaches have appeared toward optimization: some favor stochastic methods, others numerical methods, others heuristic methods. All focus on the same issues of optimizing performance at risk levels. This book will provide the forum that the software vendors are looking for to showcase their new breed of software. It will also provide a forum for the academics to showcase their latest research. It will be a must-read book for portfolio managers who need to know whether their current optimization software provider is up to snuff compared to the competition, whether they need to move to a competitor product, whether they need to be more aware of the cutting-edge academic research as well. This work: presents a unique 'confrontation' between software engineers and academics; highlights a global view of common optimization issues; emphasizes the research and market challenges of optimization software while avoiding sales pitches; and, accentuates real applications, not laboratory results.

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Product Description

Editor Stephen Satchell brings us a book that truly lives up to its title: optimizing optimization by taking the lessons learned about the failures of portfolio optimization from the credit crisis and collecting them into one book, providing a variety of perspectives from the leaders in both industry and academia on how to solve these problems both in theory and in practice. Industry leaders are invited to present chapters that explain how their new breed of optimization software addresses the faults of previous versions. Software vendors present their best of breed optimization software, demonstrating how it addresses the faults of the credit crisis. Cutting-edge academic articles complement the commercial applications to provide a well-rounded insight into the current landscape of portfolio optimization. Optimization is the holy grail of portfolio management, creating a portfolio in which return is highest in light of the risk the client is willing to take. Portfolio optimization has been done by computer modeling for over a decade, and several leading software companies make a great deal of money by selling optimizers to investment houses and hedge funds. Hedge funds in particular were enamored of heavily computational optimizing software, and many have been burned when this software did not perform as, er, expected during the market meltdown. The software providers are currently reworking their software to address any shortcomings that became apparent during the meltdown, and are eager for a forum to address their market and have the space to describe in detail how their new breed of software can manage not only the meltdown problems but also perform faster and ever before-that is, optimizing the optimizers!! In addition, there is a strong line of serious well respected research on portfolio optimization coming from the academic side of the finance world. Many different academic approaches have appeared toward optimization: some favor stochastic methods, others numerical methods, others heuristic methods. All focus on the same issues of optimizing performance at risk levels. This book will provide the forum that the software vendors are looking for to showcase their new breed of software. It will also provide a forum for the academics to showcase their latest research. It will be a must-read book for portfolio managers who need to know whether their current optimization software provider is up to snuff compared to the competition, whether they need to move to a competitor product, whether they need to be more aware of the cutting-edge academic research as well. This work: presents a unique 'confrontation' between software engineers and academics; highlights a global view of common optimization issues; emphasizes the research and market challenges of optimization software while avoiding sales pitches; and, accentuates real applications, not laboratory results.

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Product Details
EAN
9780123749529
ISBN
0123749522
Other Information
Illustrated
Dimensions
23.2 x 16.5 x 2.2 centimeters (0.31 kg)

Promotional Information

Solutions to portfolio optimization problems by industry and academic leaders

Table of Contents

Optimizing OptimizationStephen SatchellSection 1: Practitioners and Products1. Robust Portfolio Optimization Using Second Order Cone ProgrammingFiona Kolbert and Laurence Wormald2. Novel Approaches to Portfolio Construction: Multiple Risk Models and Multi-Solution GenerationSebastian Ceria, Francis Margot, Anthony Renshaw, and Anureet Saxena3. Bitter Lessons Learned from Practical Optimization or A Holding Hand Through the Dark Valley of InfeasibilityDaryl Roxburgh, Katja Scherer, and Tim Matthews4. The Windham Portfolio AdvisorMark KritzmanSection 2: Theory5. Modeling, Estimation, and Optimization of Equity Portfolios with Heavy-tailed DistributionsAmira Biglova, Sergio Ortobelli, Svetlozar Rachev, and Frank J. Fabozzi6. Staying Ahead on Downside RiskGiuliano De Rossi7. Optimization and Portfolio SelectionHal Forsey and Frank Sortino8. Computing Optimal Mean/Downside Risk Frontiers: the Role of EllipticityA.D. Hall and Stephen Satchell9. Portfolio Optimization with ‘Threshold Accepting’: A Practical GuideManfred Gilli and Enrico Schumann10. Some Properties Averaging Simulated Optimization MethodsJ. Knight and Stephen Satchell11. Heuristic Portfolio Optimization: Bayesian Updating with the Johnson Family of DistributionsRichard Louth12. More Than You Ever Wanted to Know about Conditional Value at Risk-OptimizationBernd Scherer

About the Author

Stephen Satchell is a Fellow of Trinity College, the Reader in Financial Econometrics at the University of Cambridge and Visiting Professor at Birkbeck College, City University Business School and University of Technology, Sydney. He provides consultancy for a range of city institutions in the broad area of quantitative finance. He has published papers in many journals and has a particular interest in risk.

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