The Physics of Wall Street: a brief History of Predicting the Unpredictable
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The Prediction Company
• 153 Griffin Street office in July 1991. the time for being choosy was com- ing to an end. the partners knew they didn’t want to sell the company so soon into the adventure, but the idea of being someone else’s hedge fund was starting to look appealing. At least they’d have capital, and they would be (more or less) independent. they had spent months interviewing possible partners, and at this point it was hard to imagine a better solution. And then, in early March 1992, a miracle happened. farmer had been invited to give a presentation at an annual computer conference. He had reluctantly agreed to attend, on the basis that Silicon valley investors would be there and they might be willing to offer some no- strings-attached financing. He gave a talk on the role of computers in prediction, which generated a lot of questions. Afterward, as he was packing up his slides, a man in a suit approached him. He introduced himself as craig Heimark, a partner at o’connor and Associates — the firm that had made its first fortune by successfully modifying the Black-Scholes equation to account for fat-tailed distributions, under the guidance of Michael Greenbaum and clay Struve. By 1991, it was one of the biggest players in the chicago commodities markets, with a focus on high-tech derivatives trading. the company had six hundred employees and billions of dollars under management. o’connor wasn’t using nonlinear forecasting, and the Prediction company wasn’t inter- ested in derivatives. But nonetheless, o’connor and Associates were the Predictors’ kind of people. In fact, one of o’connor’s recent hires had been a friend and fellow researcher back in farmer’s and Packard’s academic days. Shortly after farmer and Heimark met, farmer received a phone call from another o’connor partner, named david Weinberger. Wein- berger had been one of the very first quants, leaving a teaching job in operations research (essentially, a branch of applied mathematics) at Yale to work for Goldman Sachs in 1976, even before Black arrived. He’d moved to o’connor in 1983, to help that company come up with new strategies as more and more companies got on the Black-Scholes bandwagon. He was one of the few people in the industry, even in 1991, who both was high powered enough to make a deal and also spoke the language of the scientists running the Prediction company. He called on a friday afternoon, from chicago. on Saturday morning, he was sitting in the Griffin Street office. o’connor turned out to be just the kind of firm that the Predic- tion company wanted to work with — in large part because the people working at o’connor were able to understand what farmer and Pack- ard were doing well enough to evaluate it themselves. Under the deal they ultimately negotiated, the Prediction company maintained its in- dependence. o’connor put up the investment capital, in exchange for the majority of the proceeds; it also fronted the Prediction company the funds it so desperately needed in order to pay salaries and buy equipment in the meantime. the deal with o’connor seemed perfect at the time. But it turned out to be even better than the Prediction company founders had hoped. When o’connor came knocking on the Prediction company’s door, it already had a long-running partnership with Swiss Bank corporation (SBc), a nearly century-and-a-half-old Swiss bank. And then, in 1992, before the ink was dry on o’connor’s deal with the Prediction com- pany, SBc announced its intention to buy o’connor outright. the Prediction company found itself in a partnership negotiated with its kindred spirits at o’connor but funded by the much deeper pockets of SBc. Weinberger was given a top management position at SBc and continued as the principal liaison for the Prediction company. It was an ideal arrangement. the Predictors had hit the big time. In 1998, SBc merged with the still-larger Union Bank of Switzer- land to form UBS, one of the largest banks in the world. despite the size difference, however, most of the senior positions at UBS went to former SBc managers and the relationship with the Prediction com- pany was maintained. the Prediction company, following the o’connor tradition as a secretive high-tech firm, never released any metrics of its success publicly — and none of the former principals or board members with whom I spoke were authorized to share any concrete information. this might seem suspicious. After all, if you’re successful, why hide it? Here, though, the opposite is the case: on Wall Street, success breeds 154 • t h e p h y s i c s o f wa l l s t r e e t |
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