Tuesday, December 15, 2009


也許時間是一種解藥.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Work started at Morgan Stanley

Morgan Stanley moved to its new office in the International Commerce Center (known as ICC) at the end of last year. At a height of 484m, ICC will soon become the tallest building in Hong Kong and the 4th tallest building in the world. Morgan Stanley took a total of 16 floors inside the building. The bank even has its own dedicated entrance and a set of elevators!

Anyway, I am going through training right now. Real work will commence on Thursday.

Since the tower is situated at the tip of the Kowloon Island, the view from the office is unbelievable. I will post some pictures soon.

First four weeks of summer

The first four weeks of summer 2009 were really exciting!

My MIT friend Jason and I spent 3 weeks working on an exciting quantitative finance research project. We were inspired by the recent fluctuations of Palm Inc. After that, I took part in a 2000-mile roadtrip to the mid-west and witnessed the aftermath of the automobile industry apocalypse. Last but not least, I spent six days in the United Kingdom before work starts at MS. I attended a May Ball at Cambridge University and paid a visit to Edinburgh and Glasgow in Scotland.

Picture of me in Edinburgh:

Edinburgh was absolutely stunning. Modern stores are hidden away inside these beautiful buildings that combine features of medieval Gothic and renaissance architecture:


Edinburgh rocks! A bunch of people were giving out free hugs on High Street:


Monday, June 1, 2009

Summer 2009 Plans


Hong Kong, China! I'll be there for 10 weeks this summer.

This is my current plan for the summer -

23rd May - 11th June
Working on a long-term trading fund.
Road trip to Detroit, Cleveland and Chicago with Arjun.
Doing research for my Masters of Engineering project.

12th June - 18th June
Fancy May Ball at Cambridge University.
Meeting old friends in London.
Visiting Edinburgh and Glasgow in Scotland.

19th June - 25th August
Investment Banking at Morgan Stanley. If I am lucky, I may work on some M&A deals.
Traveling around Asia: Taiwan, South Korea, China, Japan.
Working more on the long-term trading fund.

26th August - 6th September
Working on a non-profit project in Hanoi, Vietnam. I will be establishing a recycling system for middle-school children along with a team of amazing people!


Remember to follow my blog and my Twitter! I will be updating both of them frequently throughout the summer.

Long-term Capital Management (LTCM)


Founder of LTCM: John Meriwether

I just watched a lecture given by Eric Rosenfeld, one of the founding partners of Long-term Capital Management. LTCM imploded in 1998 following the Russian financial crisis. Partners of the firm include Nobel laureates such as Myron Scholes and Robert Merton.

One of the basic strategies behind LTCM's investment philosophy is to explore inefficiencies in the fixed income market. For example, let's consider a case where a 29-yr and a 30-yr bond have yields of 5.62% and 5.50% respectively. If you calculate the forward rate using these two yields, you need a negative forward rate to achieve such a term structure, which really does not make much economic sense. The reason behind this inverted term structure is because the 30-yr bond is much more liquid then the 29-yr bond. This means some investors are paying a 12 basis points liquidity premium to own the 30-yr bond. To take advantage of this pricing inefficiency, LTCM essentially shorts the over-priced 30-yr bond and long the 29-yr bond. So when do the yields coverage? Every six months, the Federal Reserve issues new 30-yr bonds, effectively making the old 30-yr bonds look "old and dusty". The decrease in trading activity removes the liquidity premium.

Why did LTCM collapse? Many people attribute it to poor risk management. While LTCM had a leverage of 300-to-1 at some point, Eric Rosenfeld argues that high leverage does not mean excessive risk taking. Nevertheless, when the Russian government defaulted on their newly-issued bonds (first payment), LTCM's investments went afloat. Swap spreads went sky-high (Avg daily sigma: 1bp, Aug 21st daily sigma: 21bp). LTCM lost $160M on a single trade on the morning of August 21st 1998. Things went downhill from that point onwards. The firm's mark-to-market policy drove them to liquidation.

A good book to read about the collapse of LTCM is "When Genius Failed: The Rise and Fall of Long-Term Capital Management".

Monday, May 4, 2009

Popfly mashup

Check out http://www.popfly.com.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Summer 2008 in Beijing

I spent 3 months working in Beijing during the summer of 2008. I had the opportunity to witness one of the best Olympics opening ceremonies in history.

At the beautiful Beihai Park in Beijing

A Food Street in Bejing

Scorpions are tasty

Beihai Park in Beijing

Main Stadium for summer Olympics 08' - The Bird's Nest

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Sunset in San Francisco



I took this picture of the San Francisco bay area when I visited there in late December. The weather was absolutely gorgeous - striking a stark contrast against Boston's freezing winter snow storms.

Saturday, February 14, 2009

5 Most Useful Websites on the Internet

  1. Wall Street Journal
    http://www.wsj.com

  2. Bloomberg
    http://www.bloomberg.com

  3. Financial Times
    http://www.ft.com

  4. Engadget
    http://www.engadget.com

  5. TechCrunch
    http://www.techcrunch.com

Introduction to Game Theory

Game Theory a Critical Introduction

The office: Jim pranks Dwight

Jim pulls off a humorous prank -

Atlantis found using Google Maps?

Gizmodo claims that the lost city of Atlantis has been found... using Google Maps. The alleged site is located at 31 15'15.53N, 24 15'30.53W. You can be the judge for yourself:


View Larger Map

Fun flash game called PowerPool

I came across PowerPool when I was trying to find fun little flash games to play online. The goal is simple - you just need to put every ball into the pocket. There are a few cool combination trick shots you can do as well.





Saturday, January 3, 2009

How to get Spotify in the U.S.

Spotify has a free near CD-quality streaming service. It has most of the songs you want. Unfortunately, the service bans users with U.S. IP address due to copyright issues. This is how you can use Spotify if you are in the U.S. -

1) Go to http://www.daveproxy.co.uk/
2) Enter the following URL: https://www.spotify.com/en/get-started/
3) Create your account, use CB21RD as postal code
4) Download client, works for mac/windows and perfect under linux with wine. Client does not seem to check IP address as of 3rd Jan 2009.