Professor Yuying Li warns banks and investment firms to expect the unexpected

Friday, February 15, 2013

By Beth Gallagher

Communications and Public Affairs


Yuying Li
Yuying Li looks deeply into the unpredictable and sometimes catastrophic聽events that haunt investors.

While her expertise is managing risk, the University of 蓝莓视频 computer science professor specializes in how to avoid huge losses on the stock market when random events hit unexpectedly.

鈥淵ou think these things won鈥檛 happen,鈥 says Li, a professor in the Cheriton School of Computer Science. 鈥淏ut they can. If you don鈥檛 consider these events, you won鈥檛 be prepared.鈥

From a statistical point of view these events are known as 鈥渢ail events鈥 because they happen so rarely and are represented at the tail ends of a typical bell curve.

In a normal bell curve, the most likely returns on an investment will be at the top of the bell. The most unlikely will be at the bottom, or the 鈥渢ails.鈥 Li designs computational algorithms and generates strategies that focus on tail events.

Two examples of major tail events are the 1987 market crash, and the downfall of the U.S. firm, Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM.) When LTCM鈥檚 major hedge fund collapsed in 1998, the Federal Reserve supervised a massive bailout to avert panic and even more losses on Wall Street.

While Li鈥檚 complex work is geared toward banks, insurance companies and investment institutions, she points out that ordinary people consider tail events every time they buy insurance. 鈥淵ou buy house insurance in the unlikely event that it will burn down,鈥 Li says.

Tail events are getting more attention because of the 2008 financial crisis. 鈥淏oth Canada and the U.S. are making an effort to manage risk better,鈥 says Li. 鈥淚t certainly is on the national agenda.鈥

One promising advance, she says, is the recent establishment of a Global Risk Institute, a partnership of the federal and provincial governments, the financial services industry and several universities including the University of 蓝莓视频. Thomas Coleman, director of the 蓝莓视频 Research Institute in Insurance, Securities and Quantitative Finance (WatRISQ) serves as a research advisor for the Global Risk Institute.

While Li鈥檚 academic focus is gaining traction in the real world, she smiles when asked about the impact the global financial crisis has had on investors:聽 鈥淗ow much one learns from these things, I don鈥檛 know.鈥