ham_sandwich | 6 years ago | on: Helicopter Money: Way Out of Crisis or Fallacy of Traditional Economics?
ham_sandwich's comments
ham_sandwich | 6 years ago | on: In Battle to Recruit New Quants, Hedge Funds Outpay Banks
On the machine learning side, in my experience it’s often simple, linear models that work best in the messy world of financial data. I’m sure there are shops out there breaking out the GPU clusters and training NNs with 6 trillion parameters but in no way will your super deep NN guarantee alpha whatsoever.
ham_sandwich | 6 years ago | on: The High-Frequency Trading Arms Race: Frequent Batch Auctions as a Solution [pdf]
I know very little about HFT, but it seems like we’ve gone past “peak HFT margins”. With the Virtu+KCG merger, firms like Jump doing microwave stuff, it seems like return on assets for these firms could have already peaked.
ham_sandwich | 6 years ago | on: Ask HN: Have you started a business because nobody wanted to hire you?
I haven’t done so personally yet but it’s starting to look like I might consider this route.
Several years ago, I would have leaned toward a SaaS business targeting some super niche vertical, not to make 1000x VC style rocket-ship returns of course, but as a way to bootstrap into a nice business. I get the sense most verticals with a TAM worth going after are now very competitive.
Interested to see if people see opportunities in non-tech routes.
ham_sandwich | 6 years ago | on: Tesla Live Stream – Autonomy Day [video]
On one hand there are hyper-bulls who claim Tesla is a $4000 stock and the future of transportation. On the other, hyper-bears claim the equity should trade around $0-$10. There seems to be no middle ground.
It seems like they are almost betting the company on FSD. I don’t think FSD is really even close to a possibility over the next 5-10yrs. I hope I’m wrong, but if I’m right, I don’t see how Tesla keeps going on like this.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Nassim Talebs case against Nate Silver is bad math
Taleb thinks 538’s probabilities represent a binary option price on the event, in which case, yes, the probabilities should stay very close to 50% because the vol is so high. Whereas Silver’s models are actually saying “Based on current polls, if the election were held tomorrow, then the probability candidate X wins is Y%” and are thus allowed to swing more wildly. Aren’t both just fundamentally different things or am I missing something in Taleb’s argument?
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Apple Hires AI and Deep Learning Expert Ian Goodfellow
More broadly, does success in academia usually translate to delivering business value? Are these companies betting on these researchers to come up with the next great DL architecture?
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Andrew Yang and Pete Buttigieg Have Blown Up on Twitter, and in Betting Markets
If prediction markets had more depth, I’m sure we would see politics hedge funds emerge.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Show HN: Applying Machine Learning to March Madness
The odds coming out of Vegas are usually priced correctly. Sports markets are very efficient—although perhaps not as ruthlessy efficient as public equity markets. I would imagine there are still syndicates out there that are the “RenTec of sports betting” and just printing alpha.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Launch HN: Bottomless (YC W19) – Coffee Restocked with a Smart Scale
Reminds me of a Whitehead quote that I like that can also serve as a heuristic to evaluate business ideas:
“Civilization advances by extending the number of important operations which we can perform without thinking about them”
I love that literally everything is abstracted away from the customer. Stuff just appears like magic.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: What are the most important innovations in human history?
-the use of fire
-the number 0. (Although we can debate if this was invented or discovered)
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Regulators Move to Ease Post-Crisis Oversight of Wall Street
I could see why they’d want to get rid of Volckler though, so the big I-banks can return to the serious pre-crisis trading revenues they were printing.
Just looking quickly at Goldman’s 2006 10K shows they had over $25B in trading revenue, compared to $5.6B from their traditional investment banking sleeve. I had no idea it was at that level, wow.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Topological methods for unsupervised learning problems [video]
UMAP has already demonstrated its efficacy as a tool in any data scientist’s belt. Ayasdi and Gunnar Carlson’s work is certainly interesting, but unsure how much business value it can actually unlock. Seems like there is also opportunity to draw inspiration from the applied category theory crew (Spivak, Fong etc) to use some CT tools to approach data science from a fresh perspective.
Some of the research coming out is interesting, but as a practitioner I’m more interested in seeing how TDA can add differentiated value in a business context. Interested to hear where people see the field moving next.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: As AWS Use Soars, Companies Surprised by Cloud Bills
Besides giving businesses more legibility into what specific parts of their business logic cost to operate vs. the value they generate, you can start building higher-order financial systems based on flows of capital+information within businesses. From there you can implement all sorts of financial engineering like insurance and options+derivatives that could allow businesses to do things like dial up leverage against these flows. Certainly half-baked ideas, but fun to think about the possibilities.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Pee, Not Chlorine, Causes Red Eyes from Swimming Pools: CDC (2015)
But I’ve also been on teams with more free-wheeling coaches and that attitude—ahem—trickled down to the rest of the team. And people would openly talk about it and just straight up do it.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Pee, Not Chlorine, Causes Red Eyes from Swimming Pools: CDC (2015)
I’ve seen things you people wouldn’t believe. Teammates going to a corner and openly declaring “don’t come over here I’m peeing.” Coaches literally encouraging it, saying it’s not worth it to get out and miss a set when you can stay in the water: “your urine is just a tiny, minuscule fraction of the total volume anyways”
When you spend that much time in the water with your teammates, it’s no longer an “open secret” that eveyone is doing it. It’s simply open.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Pee, Not Chlorine, Causes Red Eyes from Swimming Pools: CDC (2015)
However, I don’t think it’s pee. First off, every swimmer pees in the pool.
I have been a part of tens of thousands of man-hours in the pool and seen people get out to pee maybe three times.
I have been in the first games of the day at water polo tournaments and have seen them chlorine shock the water followed by everyone’s eyes getting decimated. To me, the devil is unbalanced chlorine coupled with the thick, thick film of sunscreen that develops in the water after a scorching day with hundreds of people jumping in and out.
You get desperate when your eyes get that destroyed. The classic trick is to fill a pair of goggles with milk and just put ‘em on for a few minutes.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: 20th Century Fox Uses ML to Predict a Movie Audience
A primary concern is how you differentiate your product in the age of Netflix. If you want to make an original and complex character driven work, you’re better suited with a Netflix series. Movie studios therefore gravitate to producing works uniquely suited to highlight the things that can’t be done on the small screen and simply must be experienced at a theater. Thus, they continue to churn out special-effects laden blockbusters based on familiar IP because it makes sense for their business.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: Uber Revenue Growth Slows, Losses Persist as 2019 IPO Draws Near
The two scenarios I can see are
1). That their ride-matching platform will still play a role in a self-driving world. However, I think a worst case for Uber is Waymo gets there first and then Google can almost trivially replace Uber with their own matching platform.
2.) They acquire a startup that has a successful direct self-driving play.
Either way, the economics of their core offering changes drastically. I have a hard time believing investors in Uber aren’t pricing this in at least somewhat accurately.
ham_sandwich | 7 years ago | on: AWS Drives More Than Half of Amazon's Operating Income
wait, what's this? Bitcoin and ethereum tickers at the top of the page? A section titled 'Helicopter Money on Blockchain'? hold on a minute...
In fairness, the article did avoid a few of the 'not even wrong' pitfalls you might expect to see written about QE and other sovereign currency monetary operations