Monthly Archives: December 2010


Spanish Air Traffic Controllers Marched Back To Work As Airports Reopen

Is the story Spanish Air Traffic Controllers Marched Back To Work As Airports Reopen the sign of the future for the world?

Threatened with immediate imprisonment for sedition if they did not obey their new military commanders, and the show of force as in Madrid, the controllers capitulated.

Earlier in the story there was this chilling piece:

“I cannot talk to you properly now,” an air traffic controller at Madrid’s Barajas Airport told The Sunday Telegraph in a half whisper, his voice quavering on his mobile.

“There are civil guards here, with pistols. If we don’t start work now, we will be arrested.

Is this what free-market capitalism has come to?  Free for the rich and slave labor for the rest.

Compared to this Ronald Reagan was a pussycat. If we vote for more Republicans, we can have this mutant form of Reaganomics in this country too.

When Reagan did his shtick with the air traffic controllers, I stuck to trains for long distance travel until the new controllers could get some on-the-job training.  How would you like to fly in the skies where your safety was controlled by people working at the point of a gun?

To think that the west is giving China advice on the human rights of its workers.


Only 46% of REPUBLICANS Support Extending Bush Tax Cuts for the Rich

On 3 December 2010, ThinkProgress reports  CBS Poll Finds Only 46 Percent of Republicans Support GOP’s Stand on Extending Bush Tax Cuts for the Rich.

A CBS News poll released last night finds that 53 percent of Americans want the Bush-era tax cuts “extended only for households earning less than $250,000 per year,” a position that was advanced by a House vote yesterday. Another 14 percent want to expire all of the Bush tax cuts. Taken together, two-thirds of Americans (67 percent) want to end the Bush tax cuts for the rich. One interesting statistic from the survey indicates that the GOP’s push for giving the richest 2 percent an additional tax cut is not even supported by its own base:

‘Only ten percent of Democrats and one in four independents back the GOP proposal to extend the tax cuts for all. Even among Republicans, support for extending all the cuts is less than half at 46 percent.’

Nevertheless, the White House is indicating to the GOP leadership in private negotiations that it is willing to acquiesce on its views and temporarily extend the tax cuts for the rich.

I, personally, would like to see ALL of the Bush tax cuts expire, and have the freed-up funds spent on extending unemployment benefits, shoring up Medicare, extending funds to the states, and investing in future growth by funding education, infrastructure, and research.

-RichardH


Financial Modelers’ Manifesto

Paul Wilmott has posted the Financial Modelers’ Manifesto on his blog. The manifesto is signed by Emanuel Derman and Paul Wilmott.

Our experience in the financial arena has taught us to be very humble in applying mathematics to markets, and to be extremely wary of ambitious theories, which are in the end trying to model human behavior. We like simplicity, but we like to remember that it is our models that are simple, not the world.

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Building financial models is challenging and worthwhile: you need to combine the qualitative and the quantitative, imagination and observation, art and science, all in the service of finding approximate patterns in the behavior of markets and securities. The greatest danger is the age-old sin of idolatry. Financial markets are alive but a model, however beautiful, is an artifice. No matter how hard you try, you will not be able to breathe life into it. To confuse the model with the world is to embrace a future disaster driven by the belief that humans obey mathematical rules.

They end the manifesto with:

The Modelers’ Hippocratic Oath

~ I will remember that I didn’t make the world, and it doesn’t satisfy my equations.

~ Though I will use models boldly to estimate value, I will not be overly impressed by mathematics.

~ I will never sacrifice reality for elegance without explaining why I have done so.

~ Nor will I give the people who use my model false comfort about its accuracy. Instead, I will make explicit its assumptions and oversights.

~ I understand that my work may have enormous effects on society and the economy, many of them beyond my comprehension.

I believe in this oath even for my former line of work modeling the behavior of integrated circuits. In my line of work, I was actually modeling laws of physics, but all models simplify.  The oath is even more important in the world of finance than it is in the world of physics, because, as the authors state:

It’s a different story with finance and economics, which are concerned with the mental world of monetary value. Financial theory has tried hard to emulate the style and elegance of physics in order to discover its own laws. But markets are made of people, who are influenced by events, by their ephemeral feelings about events and by their expectations of other people’s feelings. The truth is that there are no fundamental laws in finance. And even if there were, there is no way to run repeatable experiments to verify them.

The point they are making is an acknowledgment of the principle of reflexivity that George Soros describes in The New Paradigm for Financial Markets: The Credit Crash of 2008 and What It Means.


Persistence Pays in Understanding Taleb

In my previous post, Nassim Nicholas Taleb Explains It All, I noted the feeling that Taleb had something important to tell me, but I was having a hard time figuring out the practical implications of what he was trying to tell me.

I have gone back to his web site a few times and looked at random items for which he has links.  True to the very randomness he has been describing, I suddenly and unexpectedly came across an item that has taken me to the next level of understanding.

His link Mandelbrot Makes Sense points to a document that contains two articles by Taleb. The article titles are “Mandelbrot Makes Sense: A Book Review Essay A discussion of Benoit Mandelbrot’s The (Mis)Behavior of Markets” and “Fat Tails, Asymmetric Knowledge, and Decision Making Nassim Nicholas Taleb’s Essay in honor of Benoit Mandelbrot’s 80th birthday.”

The best teaser that I can come up with are a few paragraphs from a few sections of the second article.

The central problem of uncertainty

What I call the central epistemological problem of uncertainty is summarized as follows: we do not observe probability distributions, only random draws from an unspecified generator. So we need data to figure out the probability distribution. How do we gauge the sufficiency of the size of the sample? Well, from the probability distribution. If at the same time one needs data to figure out the probability distribution, and the probability distribution to figure out if we have enough data, then we have a severe circular epistemological problem.

When, many years ago, I first came across the explanation of measuring the error in statistical sampling I thought I had gained a great insight into some of the mysteries of statistics. I might have felt queasy about the reasoning for a moment, but the skepticism had been beaten out of me enough to put aside the realization of the circular reasoning involved.

Finally he did discuss, in a way that was finally understandable to me, what to do with his insights into the flaws of applying inappropriate models of the statistics of stock markets.

An easier solution

As an operator first and last, I believe that there are, however, far more elementary (and practical) ways to deal with this problem, or at least to protect ourselves from its ill effects. How? I propose two approaches.

First, consider Pascal’s wager. We can change our payoff structure to accommodate what absence of knowledge we suffer from, and with respect to which moments of the distribution. For instance, if the data has “infinite” (or undefined) variance, one can avoid exposure to such infinite tail by clipping the sensitivity to the offending part of the distribution. Purchasing a simple derivative(say, an extremely out-of-themoney call), if it such product is available, may provide a solution. Our doubt can be targeted and remedied by transactions. Tout simplement.

I am not saying that I understand everything he is saying as much as I would  like to, but the dawn is starting to dawn on me.


When I talk about skepticism being beaten out of me, I refer to a quite few incidents in my engineering career. The more I think about mentioning them, the more I realize that there are so many that I will have to select just one.

The first half of my career revolved around the support and development of software to simulate the behavior of integrated circuits and the processes that were used to manufacture those circuits. I was in regular contact with several of the leading academics in this field. At one point, one of these academics tried to sell me on the latest research of his students. He was promoting the statistical analysis of behavior of circuits and processes. I never could feel comfortable with how this could work in practice. It was quite uncomfortable to play the part of the persistent skeptic who kept asking for a satisfactory proof that was beyond what the purveyors of the techniques were quite willing to accept as proof for themselves.


A second thing that really hit home about what Taleb was saying harks back to an incident in Freshman year at MIT. I was trying to get ideas for a paper I had to write about Plato. I asked a friend what he was going to write about. He particularly liked the part in the book where the logic says that if A implies B and B implies C and C implies A, then A, B, and C must be true. I told him that this was circular reasoning and there was nothing about the truth of A, B, and C that one could glean from their implied relationships. He did not take my advice to find something else to write about. I chose to write about my frustration at the logical Sophistry used in the book.

When the professor handed out the graded papers, my paper got a D, the highest grade I had ever received in this class. Not only did my friend get an A, but the professor chose to read to the class the very section of his paper that I had cautioned him about.

I still tell this story when the occasion arises. I still believe my friend and the professor where both wrong. What amazes me about what I read in Taleb’s papers was that I had failed to consciously come to grips with the circular reasoning in some of the mathematics that I had come to accept over the years. I emphasize “consciously”, because I think my gut always made me nervous about these ideas when I thought enough about their derivation.