Quant Quakes and the Evolution of Quant Trading

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By Vinesh Jha, ExtractAlpha CEO and founder

I recently gave a talk to the Master’s in Finance class at the University of Hong Kong on the topic of “quant quakes.”  This is a topic near and dear to my heart, as it was, ultimately a quant quake which led to the founding of ExtractAlpha.  And we’d just experienced another quant quake in the Chinese equities market.

The 2007 Quant Quake

Today, ExtractAlpha provides alternative data and stock selection signals to the world’s top systematic funds.  We were founded in 2013, but the idea for the company dates back to 2007.  At the time I had just started at Morgan Stanley’s largest prop trading desk, Process Driven Trading (PDT) after an earlier career in sell side and independent research and a brief stint in prop trading at Merrill Lynch.  PDT had in some past quarters accounted for up to 25% of Morgan Stanley revenues, and had a long track record stretching back to 1993.  But it was still a relatively small group, fewer than 30 people at the time of my joining.

That July, rumors were swirling around about some quant strategies not doing very well.  And then, suddenly, on Tuesday, August 7, many quants, ourselves included, suffered large losses.  (I’m not disclosing anything proprietary here; unfortunately, a version of these events was poorly documented in a WSJ article, and a subsequent book by the same author which I will not link to because it’s so inaccurate and so poorly written that it was my first exposure to the concept of Gell-Mann Amnesia).  Some funds referred to the losses that day as “5 standard deviation events”.

On Wednesday, the losses at a lot of quant funds had extended, and had spread to Europe.  By Thursday, things were even worse, and had spread to Asia, and it was now a “12 standard deviation event.”  (Except it wasn’t, because quant strategy returns are not normally distributed).  By that time, according to the WSJ, PDT had lost a half a billion dollars.

So, every fund in that situation is faced with a dilemma.  Do you cut your book, because you may not live to trade another day?  Do you hold on, in the belief that what you were witnessing was – had to be – a temporary dislocation?  If you believed in your models, then at some point things had to snap back.  The old saying (possibly apocryphally attributed to Keynes)  is that “markets can remain irrational longer than  you can remain solvent” – or, in this case, that the particular market irrationality which you’ve been exploiting for a long time can pause or reverse for longer than you can retain AUM.

The nice thing about a prop trading group is that you only have one client – the bank in this case.  Of course that client may decide that you need to pull your capital at any time.  Hedge fund LPs, on the other hand, typically have at most monthly liquidity, so the hedge fund manager may choose to cut, or to hold on.

It turns out that holding on through that Friday would have gotten you back nearly all of your losses, if you were able to hold on!  You’ve then got a positive “12 standard deviation” event on your hands (unless you’d included the prior three days in your variance estimates).  And so if you held on, your monthly returns might have looked entirely unremarkable, despite some very remarkable intra-month moves.

Post mortem

Here’s one chart which tells the story, in Khadani and Lo’s “What Happened to the Quants in August 2007”:

That chart uses a simple stat arb strategy, one-day price reversal.  But you can observe similar return streams from long-short portfolios formed using basic quant signals like Value and Momentum; here are some charts from ExtractAlpha’s AlphaClub tool for that time period:

So that was the original 2007 Quant Quake.  But how and why did it happen?  The story which emerged was that Bear Stearns had recently shut down two of their MBS hedge funds, causing losses in the credit markets.  What does that have to do with equity quant strategy losses?  Apparently there was one multi-strat fund, with exposure to both credit and equity strategies, who had been affected by the credit losses.  But credit books are illiquid, and so to cover their losses they unwound their (much more liquid) quant book.  And then their quant book was very much like everyone else’s quant book, so their losses became everyone else’s losses, as they sold what everyone else was holding and covered what everyone else was short.

Why did all the books look similar?  Because they all used similar inputs: the data that went into the strategies was largely the same (market data, financial statements, and the like); and the strategies built on top of these datasets were largely the same (reversal, Value, and the like).

So, a few lessons were learned.  Even if your book is market-neutral (and, keep in mind, the markets in general were not directionally turbulent during that week), and even if you were neutral to the factors in your commercial risk model, you were still subject to strategy crowding risk.  Your best bet is therefore to heavily diversify your alpha stream.  This should increase your Sharpe ratio and capacity in normal times, and reduce your risk during liquidations.  You can diversify your alpha stream by using different strategies on top of your standard data, but a really obvious way to do it is to look for novel datasets.  Hence the idea for ExtractAlpha!

The China Quant Quake
Fast forward to China in 2024.  Quant strategies have been on the rise in mainland China in recent years, as these charts by Chris Zhang show:

According to CITIC Securities’ estimation, in 2021, there were 645 quantitative hedge fund managers raising capital for their funds, accounting for 7.79% of the whole industry. The AUM of quantitative hedge funds is nearly RMB 1.61 trillion (approx. $241.74 billion).”

But the chart talks about “quantitative hedge funds” in China even though hedging in the A-shares market is very imperfect.  There are, for most investors, no single-name shorts (unless you can secure some from your PB’s inventory).  So to build a hedge fund, you identify stocks with good alpha potential on the long side, and hedge with index futures.  If you do this, it’s unlikely that your long book will look much like your short book in terms of risk exposures.  This is especially true if one of the biggest factors you’re trading is SMB (small minus big), i.e., you’re long small caps and short a large-cap index.  Now, SMB is not a factor that, even in 2007, most U.S. quant funds would have been trading.  It’s a volatile factor and one which typically didn’t make the leap from academia to practice for that reason.  But SMB was hugely popular among Chinese hedge funds going into 2024, as microcap names had massively outperformed the index in recent years.

So, what happened next isn’t too much of a surprise given the stage I’ve set.  Here’s a chart of fund performance which was making the rounds among institutional investors and quants in China in February:

This shows an event very much like August 2007.  Note that many of the funds plotted here aren’t equity quant funds; this includes managed futures, CTAs which traded options, and other strategies as well.  

Explaining the 2024 quake

But clearly there was some contagion effect going on.  Why?  Well, with the broad Chinese market experiencing declines, the Chinese government decided to deploy state funds, known as the “National Team,” to boost equity markets by massively buying index futures, starting on January 16.  This buying caused, unsurprisingly, large losses on those index shorts held by the quant funds.  The quants then quickly tried to unwind their long side, causing contagion on the long books which were concentrated in common factors like SMB.  Subsequently many quants had trouble liquidating in an orderly way – for example, exchanges froze accounts, and brokerages blocked sell orders.  Regulators, as they will, then blamed the quant funds for the turmoil which government intervention had caused in the first place.

This was just as much of a shock to the relatively nascent quant hedge fund world in China as it had been to U.S. hedge funds in 2007.  Here’s a widely shared WeChat post (in Chinese) detailing one quant manager’s despair as his strategy turned south and he was unable to unwind.  History doesn’t repeat, but it certainly rhymes a bit.

Takeaways

Running quant is really tough in China, and these events have made it even more difficult.  Onshore quant funds tend to concentrate in a few, relatively simple, quant trades.  There’s loads of unpredictable government intervention, which means that (a) market structure keeps changing and models are hard to calibrate; and (b) you may not be able to execute your strategy in an orderly way.  Offshore quants had been looking to enter the A Shares market for several years, but many are giving up now and looking to other markets, which may benefit Japan or even India, where liquidity has deepened recently.  And the government interventions, ultimately, actually served to decrease investor confidence in the market – for both domestic and international investors.

But there’s a silver lining to those bold enough to continue to run quant strategies in China: you don’t have to rely on simple quant trades!  Employing the same lessons learned from the original quant quake, you can use alternative data signals to retrofit your portfolio for future quakes, diversify your alpha stream, and reduce liquidation and crowdedness risks.  And yes, as it turns out, ExtractAlpha has some signals just like that!  Our TrueBeats and Digital Revenue Signal products cover global markets including China A Shares, and use a diverse set of data inputs and features, such as detailed analyst forecasts, earnings management indicators, and web and social media data to consistently forecast earnings, revenues, and returns:

I hope this summary of two similar-but-different quant quakes was informative. 

For more information on our datasets, visit our solutions page.

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Alan Kwan

Alan joined ExtractAlpha in 2024. He is a tenured associate professor of finance at the University of Hong Kong, where he serves as the program director of the MFFinTech, teaches classes on quantitative trading and big data in finance, and conducts research in finance specializing in big data and alternative datasets. He has published research in prestigious journals and regularly presents at financial conferences. He previously worked in technical and trading roles at DC Energy, Bridgewater Associates, Microsoft and advises several fintech startups. He received his PhD in finance from Cornell and his Bachelors from Dartmouth.

John Chen

John joined ExtractAlpha in 2023 as the Director of Partnerships & Customer Success. He has extensive experience in the financial information services industry, having previously served as a Director of Client Specialist at Refinitiv. John holds dual Bachelor’s degrees in Commerce and Architecture (Design) from The University of Melbourne.

Chloe Miao

Chloe joined ExtractAlpha in 2023. Prior to joining, she was an associate director at Value Search Asia Limited. She earned her Masters of Arts in Global Communications from the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Matija Ratkovic

Matija is a specialist in software sales and customer success, bringing experience from various industries. His career, before sales, includes tech support, software development, and managerial roles. He earned his BSc and Specialist Degree in Electrical Engineering at the University of Montenegro.

Jack Kim

Jack joined ExtractAlpha in 2022. Previously, he spent 20+ years supporting pre- and after-sales activities to drive sales in the Asia Pacific market. He has worked in many different industries including, technology, financial services, and manufacturing, where he developed excellent customer relationship management skills. He received his Bachelor of Business in Operations Management from the University of Technology Sydney.

Perry Stupp

Perry brings more than 20 years of Enterprise Software development, sales and customer engagement experience focused on Fortune 1000 customers. Prior to joining ExtractAlpha as a Technical Consultant, Perry was the founder, President and Chief Customer Officer at Solution Labs Inc. a data analytics company that specialized in the analysis of very large-scale computing infrastructures in place at some of the largest corporate data centers in the world.

Perry Stupp

Perry brings more than 20 years of Enterprise Software development, sales and customer engagement experience focused on Fortune 1000 customers. Prior to joining ExtractAlpha as a Technical Consultant, Perry was the founder, President and Chief Customer Officer at Solution Labs Inc. a data analytics company that specialized in the analysis of very large-scale computing infrastructures in place at some of the largest corporate data centers in the world.

Janette Ho

Janette has 22+ years of leadership and management experience in FinTech and analytics sales and business development in the Asia Pacific region. In addition to expertise in quantitative models, she has worked on risk management, portfolio attribution, fund accounting, and custodian services. Janette is currently head of relationship management at Moody’s Analytics in the Asia-Pacific region, and was formerly Managing Director at State Street, head of sales for APAC Asset Management at Thomson Reuters, and head of Asia for StarMine. She is also a board member at Human Financial, a FinTech firm focused on the Australian superannuation industry.

Leigh Drogen

Leigh founded Estimize in 2011. Prior to Estimize, Leigh ran Surfview Capital, a New York based quantitative investment management firm trading medium frequency momentum strategies. He was also an early member of the team at StockTwits where he worked on product and business development.  Leigh is now the CEO of StarKiller Capital, an institutional investment management firm in the digital asset space.

Andrew Barry

Andrew is the CEO of Human Financial, a technology innovator that is pioneering consumer-led solutions for the superannuation industry. Andrew was previously CEO of Alpha Beta, a global quant hedge fund business. Prior to Alpha Beta he held senior roles in a number of hedge funds globally.

Natallia Brui

Natallia has 7+ years experience as an IT professional. She currently manages our Estimize platform. Natallia earned a BS in Computer & Information Science in Baruch College and BS in Economics from BSEU in Belarus. She has a background in finance, cybersecurity and data analytics.

June Cook

June has a background in B2B sales, market research, and analytics. She has 10 years of sales experience in healthcare, private equity M&A, and the tech industry. She holds a B.B.A. from Temple University and an M.S. in Management and Leadership from Western Governors University.

Jenny Zhou, PhD

Jenny joined ExtractAlpha in 2023. Prior to that, she worked as a quantitative researcher for Chorus, a hedge fund under AXA Investment Managers. Jenny received her PhD in finance from the University of Hong Kong in 2023. Her research covers ESG, natural language processing, and market microstructure. Jenny received her Bachelor degree in Finance from The Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2019. Her research has been published in the Journal of Financial Markets.

Kristen Gavazzi

Kristen joined ExtractAlpha in 2021 as a Sales Director. As a past employee of StarMine, Kristen has extensive experience in analyst performance analytics and helped to build out the sell-side solution, StarMine Monitor. She received her BS in Business Management from Cornell University.

Triloke Rajbhandary

Triloke has 10+ years experience in designing and developing software systems in the financial services industry. He joined ExtractAlpha in 2016. Prior to that, he worked as a senior software engineer at HSBC Global Technologies. He holds a Master of Applied Science degree from Ryerson University specializing in signal processing.

Jackie Cheng, PhD

Jackie joined ExtractAlpha in 2018 as a quantitative researcher. He received his PhD in the field of optoelectronic physics from The University of Hong Kong in 2017. He published 17 journal papers and holds a US patent, and has 500 citations with an h-index of 13. Prior to joining ExtractAlpha, he worked with a Shenzhen-based CTA researching trading strategies on Chinese futures. Jackie received his Bachelor’s degree in engineering from Zhejiang University in 2013.

Yunan Liu, PhD

Yunan joined ExtractAlpha in 2019 as a quantitative researcher. Prior to that, he worked as a research analyst at ICBC, covering the macro economy and the Asian bond market. Yunan received his PhD in Economics & Finance from The University of Hong Kong in 2018. His research fields cover Empirical Asset Pricing, Mergers & Acquisitions, and Intellectual Property. His research outputs have been presented at major conferences such as AFA, FMA and FMA (Asia). Yunan received his Masters degree in Operations Research from London School of Economics in 2013 and his Bachelor degree in International Business from Nottingham University in 2012.

Willett Bird, CFA

Prior to joining ExtractAlpha in 2022, Willett was a sales director for Vidrio Financial. Willett was based in Hong Kong for nearly two decades where he oversaw FIS Global’s Asset Management and Commercial Banking efforts. Willett worked at FactSet, where he built the Asian Portfolio and Quantitative Analytics team and oversaw FactSet’s Southeast Asian operations. Willett completed his undergraduate studies at Georgetown University and finished a joint degree MBA from the Northwestern Kellogg School and the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology in 2010. Willett also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst (CFA) designation.

Julie Craig

Julie Craig is a senior marketing executive with decades of experience marketing high tech, fintech, and financial services offerings. She joined ExtractAlpha in 2022. She was formerly with AlphaSense, where she led marketing at a startup now valued at $1.7B. Prior to that, she was with Interactive Data where she led marketing initiatives and a multi-million dollar budget for an award-winning product line for individual and institutional investors.

Jeff Geisenheimer

Jeff is the CFO and COO of ExtractAlpha and directs our financial, strategic, and general management operations. He previously held the role of CFO at Estimize and two publicly traded firms, Multex and Market Guide. Jeff also served as CFO at private-equity backed companies, including Coleman Research, Ford Models, Instant Information, and Moneyline Telerate. He’s also held roles as advisor, partner, and board member at Total Reliance, CreditRiskMonitor, Mochidoki, and Resurge.

Vinesh Jha

Vinesh founded ExtractAlpha in 2013 with the mission of bringing analytical rigor to the analysis and marketing of new datasets for the capital markets. Since ExtractAlpha’s merger with Estimize in early 2021, he has served as the CEO of both entities. From 1999 to 2005, Vinesh was the Director of Quantitative Research at StarMine in San Francisco, where he developed industry leading metrics of sell side analyst performance as well as successful commercial alpha signals and products based on analyst, fundamental, and other data sources. Subsequently, he developed systematic trading strategies for proprietary trading desks at Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley in New York. Most recently he was Executive Director at PDT Partners, a spinoff of Morgan Stanley’s premiere quant prop trading group, where in addition to research, he also applied his experience in the communication of complex quantitative concepts to investor relations. Vinesh holds an undergraduate degree from the University of Chicago and a graduate degree from the University of Cambridge, both in mathematics.

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