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Statistical Arbitrage - Part II

- Statistical arbitrage aims to profit from short-term price movements rather than long-term trends, by going long stocks that have recently risen and short those that have fallen. This strategy aims to benefit from mean reversion while largely hedging out market risk. - In the late 1970s, advances in computing power and databases made it possible to explore this strategy on a large scale. One researcher discovered that ranking stocks by recent price changes could successfully predict short-term performance. - After initially putting the strategy aside due to volatility, Ed Thorp later hired Gerry Bamberger, who had developed a similar but less volatile statistical arbitrage model at Morgan Stanley, to implement the strategy through their firm.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
334 views2 pages

Statistical Arbitrage - Part II

- Statistical arbitrage aims to profit from short-term price movements rather than long-term trends, by going long stocks that have recently risen and short those that have fallen. This strategy aims to benefit from mean reversion while largely hedging out market risk. - In the late 1970s, advances in computing power and databases made it possible to explore this strategy on a large scale. One researcher discovered that ranking stocks by recent price changes could successfully predict short-term performance. - After initially putting the strategy aside due to volatility, Ed Thorp later hired Gerry Bamberger, who had developed a similar but less volatile statistical arbitrage model at Morgan Stanley, to implement the strategy through their firm.

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samuelcwlson
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Ed Thorp

A MATHEMATICIAN ON WALL STREET

Statistical Arbitrage Part II


In the late 1970s affordable,
powerful computers and
high quality databases were
becoming more affordable,
making a revolution in
Finance possible
The harder I work, the luckier I get.
Alan (Ace) Greenberg, Chairman, Bear Stearns.

hy do we (and others) call it


statistical arbitrage?
Arbitrage originally meant a
pair of offsetting positions
that lock in a sure profit. An
example might be selling
gold in London at $300 an ounce while at the
same time buying it at, say $290 in New York.
Suppose the total cost to finance the deal and to
insure and deliver the New York gold to London
is $5, leaving a $5 sure profit. Thats an arbitrage
in its original usage. Later the term was expanded to describe investments where risks are
expected to be largely offsetting, with a profit
that is likely, if not certain. For instance, to illustrate what is called merger arbitrage, company A
trading at $100 a share may offer to buy company
B, trading at $70 a share, by exchanging one
share of company A for each share of company B.
The market reacts instantly and company As
shares gap to, say, $88 while company Bs shares
jump to $83. Merger arbitrageurs now step in,
buying a share of B at $83 and selling short a
share of A at $88. The deal is expected to close in

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three months and, if it does, the arbitrageur will


(without leverage) make $5/$83 or 6 per cent in
three months, a simple interest annual rate of 24
per cent. But the deal is not certain until it gets
regulatory and shareholder approval, so there is
a risk of loss if the deal fails and the prices of A
and B reverse. If, for instance, the stocks of A and
B returned to their pre-announcement prices,
the arbitrageur would lose $12=$100-$88 on his
short sale of A and lose $13=$83-$70 on his purchase of B, for a total loss of $25 per $83 invested,
or a loss of 30 per cent in three months, a simple
annual rate of 120 per cent. For the arbitrageur
to take this kind of risk, he must believe the
chance of failure to be quite small.
What we do has the risk reducing characteristics of arbitrage but the two hundred or so
stocks in each of the two sides of the portfolio,
the long side and the short side, are generally not
related or linked to each other. We depend

on the statistical behavior of a large number of


favorable bets to eventually deliver our profit.
This is card counting at blackjack again, on a
much larger scale. Our average trade size, or
bet, is $54,000 and we are placing a million
bets a year, or about one bet every six seconds
that the market is open.
As I walk back to my office I think about how
our statistical arbitrage venture came to be.
I first met Steve about 1970 when I was a
mathematics professor at the University of
California at Irvine and he was a double major in
Physics and Computer Science. Steve and a
friend did an imaginative special studies summer research project using a computer to study
blackjack, under my guidance. Then in 1973
when Princeton-Newport Partners was expanding, I remembered Steve fondly and, fortunately,
he was one of the first people I hired. Able to
solve difficult problems in both computer hard-

Wilmott magazine

ware and software, Steves smart, hardworking


understated manner earned his reputation in
our firm as the man who can do anything.

The Indicators Project and the


Discovery of Statistical Arbitrage
By 1978 I had moved from the mathematics
department to the Graduate School of
Management at UCI, which enabled me to teach
courses in finance. After many stimulating discussions with Dr. Jerome Baesel, the professor in
the next office, he came to work full time at
Princeton-Newport Partners. A major responsibility was to direct research on an idea of mine
which we called the indicators project. Neither
Jerry nor I believed the efficient market theory.
We had overwhelming evidence of inefficiency,
i.e. systems that worked, from blackjack, to the
history of Warren Buffett and friends, to our
daily success in Princeton-Newport Partners. The
question wasnt Is the market efficient? but
rather How inefficient is the market? and
How can we exploit this?
The idea of the indicators project was to study
how the historical returns of securities were
affected by the values of various indicators or
characteristics such as the P.E. ratio, the book to
price ratio, company size or market value, and
scores of other fundamental and technical measures. Now this is a well-known and widely
explored idea but back in 1979 it was daring,
innovative, and with few exceptions roundly
denounced by the massed legions of academia.
The idea was timely because the necessary high
quality databases and the powerful new computers with which to explore them were just becoming affordable.
By luck, almost immediately after we began
the indicators project at the end of 1979, one of
our researchers stumbled on the germinal idea
for statistical arbitrage a single indicator that
ranked stocks from best to worst and offered a
short-term forecast of their performance compared to the others. The idea was to rank stocks
by their percentage change in price, corrected for
splits and dividends, over a recent past period
such as the last two weeks. We found that the
stocks that were most up tended to fall relative to
the market over the next few weeks and the

Wilmott magazine

U.C.I. mathematician William F. Donoghue


used to joke, little realizing how close he
was to a deep truth, Thorp, my advice is to
buy low and sell high
stocks which were the most down tended to rise
relative to the market. Using this forecast our
computer simulations showed approximately a
20 per cent annualized return from buying the
best decile of stocks, and selling short the
worst decile. We called the system MUD for the
recommended portfolio of most up, most down
stocks. As my friend U.C.I. mathematician
William F. Donoghue used to joke, little realizing
how close he was to a deep truth, Thorp, my
advice is to buy low and sell high. (He had the
habit of calling even close friends by their last
name.) The diversified portfolios of long and
short stocks had mostly offsetting market risks
so we had what we liked - a market neutral portfolio. But the total portfolio, even though it was
approximately market neutral, suffered from
moderately large random fluctuations. Spoiled
by the continuing low risk and high return performance of Princeton-Newport Partners, we put
statistical arbitrage aside for the time being.
Unknown to us, in 1982 or 1983 an ingenious
researcher at Morgan Stanley invented another
statistical arbitrage scheme with characteristics
like ours but with substantially less variability.
His project probably began trading real time in
1983. As his confidence increased with experience, it expanded in size. By 1985 it was a significant profit center at Morgan Stanley but the credit for its discovery, and the rewards from the
firm, reportedly did not attach to the discoverer,
Gerry Bamberger. While his boss Nunzio
Tartaglia continued to expand the operation
with great initial success, a dissatisfied
Bamberger chose to leave Morgan Stanley.

The Money Machine Begins


Operating
In 1985, as part of our business plan to add diver-

sified profit centers, our Princeton office


placed an ad saying Princeton-Newport Partners
was seeking to bankroll people who had successful low risk market neutral quantitative strategies. Bamberger, now out of a job, was one of
those who answered the ad. He described his
strategy as high turnover, market neutral, and
low risk, with a large number of stocks held long
and a large number held short, at any one time.
It sounded very much like our unused statistical
arbitrage strategy, so even though we only knew
the general characteristics of the portfolio, and
none of the details of the trading algorithm, we
had no difficulty believing the story. After we
checked Bambergers background, I met with
him in Newport Beach. Following lengthy negotiations, he told me how the strategy worked, once
I gave my word that I would tell no one else unless
either he okayed it or the information entered
the public domain by some other route.
Gerry Bamberger was a tall trim Orthodox
Jew with a very high IQ, an original way of looking at problems in finance, and a wry sense of
humor. He spent several weeks working with us
in Newport Beach. After a few days I noticed that
Gerry always brought a brown bag for lunch and
always ate a tuna salad sandwich. I finally had to
ask, How often do you have a tuna salad sandwich for lunch? Gerry said, Every day for the
last six years. He was a heavy smoker and Im
extremely sensitive to tobacco smoke - we did not
hire smokers nor allow smoking in our office - so
part of our negotiation was about how to handle
this. We respected each other and worked out a
compromise that met each of our needs.
Whenever Gerry needed a cigarette he would step
outside our ground floor garden office. This is
not the ordeal in Southern California that it
could have been during an east coast winter.

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