AQR offers $100,000 for best finance ideas

Quant hedge fund managers AQR Capital Management have launched a $100,000 annual competition to recognise applied academic papers in finance that have the most significant practical implications for investors.

The AQR Insight Award seeks entrants with unpublished papers that study investment in liquid assets for both tax-exempt institutional and taxable investor portfolios.

Areas of focus include asset allocation, security selection, portfolio implementation, and risk management.

David Kabiller (pictured), founding partner of AQR and its head of client strategies, says it is important that leading thinkers in analytical finance and economics focus on developing methods to enhance investment performance.

“The AQR Insight Award has been launched in recognition of the need to promote academic research that illuminates the drivers of successful investing and that can be applied to real-world portfolios,” Kabiller says.

Academic experts and investment managers will judge the papers, with AQR saying that the papers will be assessed according to their “novelty and acuity of their insights, and the potential value of those insights deployed within an investor’s portfolio”.

Sponsored Content

The $100,000 award may be divided among one to three competing entries, depending on the quality of the submissions each year.

Initial entries are due in January 2012.

Up to five finalists will gain the opportunity to present their papers to a panel of judges, consisting of senior members of AQR’s portfolio management team.

The AQR Insight Award Committee consists of 13 members, with most having doctorates in analytic finance.

“AQR is eager to engage these researchers,” Kabiller says.

“Based on our experience in helping ideas germinate into actual strategies, we do expect the process to stimulate our own innovation – but our goal here is to recognise the acorns of good research.”

AQR has more than $40 billion under management in a range of strategies from high-volatility, market-neutral hedge funds to low-volatility, benchmark-driven traditional portfolios. The fund also provides exposures to other alternative assets through mutual funds.

In other award news, fund accounting and service provider Dealis Fund Operations recently won the SimCorp StrategyLab Growth Management Excellence Award 2011.

The award recognises Dealis for its excellence in driving efficiency improvements in back office operations.

Dealis spokesperson Roman Trageiser says market volatility has sharpened the focus of investment managers to concentrate on their core business and outsource other areas of their business.

“Our growth strategy is, among other things, based on thorough market and competitive analyses,” Trageiser says.

“We find that because of greater market volatility, investment managers increasingly focus on their core competences and seek to outsource what they regard as non-core activities.”

Dealis administers approximately 2500 mutual and special funds representing 340 billion euros ($470.5 billion) and is a joint venture company set up by Allianz Global Investors and DekaBank. Dealis is the largest provider of fund accounting and fund administration services in Germany.

Dealis Fund Operations was judged the winner by a jury consisting of director of SimCorp StrategyLab, Professor Ingo Walter, Professor Stephen Brown of New York University, Professor Paul Verdin of the University of Leuven and SimCorp’s CEO, Peter L. Ravn.

The award acknowledges best practice within risk, cost and growth management in the global investment management industry.

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Blinder: a power of paradox at Princeton

Pension funds or any investor holding a slug of long-term fixed income needs to factor in some capital losses soon, says Princeton academic and former vice president of the Federal Reserve, Alan Blinder. “The timing is difficult to predict, but three or 15 months, it doesn’t matter. It is predictable,” he says. “The unpredictable part

UniSuper defies accepted thinking

Mention any asset class to John Pearce, chief investment officer of Australian superannuation fund UniSuper, and he will doggedly set out the good and bad thinking around it. A common source of his ire is the sight of investors herding around a belief based on a lack of rigorous thinking. Good practice for him involves

OTPP deals with underfunding

Even the most successful and well run pension plans are facing underfunding challenges. The $129-billion Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan is the latest to investigate solutions to solve the mismatch between the pension promise and the funds required to meet that, says Jim Leech, chief executive of the organisation . OTPP has appointed a taskforce – chaired

Fewer, bigger funds for UK?

Australia, the US, Canada and Denmark have all done it. Kazakhstan and even Oman are talking about it. Increasingly, public sector pension funds are merging or pooling their assets into fewer bigger schemes. It’s no surprise the debate is gathering momentum in the United Kingdom, ripe for consolidation with a Local Government Pension Fund Scheme

Scenario analysis: applicable to anything?

Attempts to apply a formula to asset allocation based on an asset’s historical volatility and relationship with other assets tend to fail when presented with black-swan events. Equities tend to rise along with commodities except when presented with political events such as the price hikes in oil in 1973 that sent equities into free fall.

Kurtzer on Holy Land of opportunity

The Middle East is in a state of dynamic flux, with positive change manifesting itself in the countries going through an economic and financial revolution as much as a political one. Institutional investors from all parts of the world have a role to play in that revolution, according to former US ambassador to Egypt and

Previous