Luckily, Yoon Gihwanâs studio wasnât far from Woosungâs place. He found it odd why he didnât live in a multi-bedroom apartment, but as soon as he walked in, he understood.
âDo you live apart from your family?â
âMy son and wife live abroad. My son was being bullied at school, so I wanted him to get away from that.â
â⊠Oh.â
âYou donât have to pity me. This place is wonderful.â
Yoon Gihwan was right. The studio was clean and well organized. Even the kitchen shone without a spot of grease. Woosung saw the books he kept around a shelf and asked.
âDid you read all these?â
âIâve got nothing else to do, so I read a lot.â
Over a hundred IT related books lined the shelves. Woosung picked up a few books. Some titles included âMaintenance and Use of Linux,â âObject-Oriented Programming,â âClean Codes,â and âUse of Oracle Database.â
âYou brought your work homeâŠâ
âHow could I not? Learning never stops. If you donât continue improving your skills, you wonât last long in this field.â
Woosung nodded to his good sense.
âWell, thatâs about it for our small talk. Letâs begin our session.â
âSure. Go ahead.â
Woosung brought out a whiteboard and wrote a few equations.
Call Option equation c=SN (d1) â X e â rT N (d2).
Put Option equation p = Xe â rTN(-d2) â SN(-d1).
What Yoon Gihwan wrote was the Black-Scholes equation. It was something Woosung hasnât seen since university.
âThis is the foundation of the options market. Myron Scholes received the Nobel prize for Economic Sciences in 1997 for this. This is an example of an algorithm.â
Woosung remembered reading about it.
âBut even this equation was useless on October 19, 1987, the Black Monday.â
âWow! You have been studying. Youâre right. The possibility of Dow Jones dropping 7% was mathematically 0%. When it happened, the Blackâs system froze, and people became frantic. They ended up all selling, which caused a drop of 25%. No one could do anything.â
âBlack said you may calculate the starsâ movements, but you canât guess peopleâs reactions.â
Yoon Gihwan exclaimed.
âWow! You will make a great student.â
âHe was originally a mathematician but later turned to economics and financial consulting.â
âThatâs right. He became well known in economics. The stock market used this equation like its the golden rule.â
Yoon Gihwan then added more names to the whiteboard.
-David Shaw
-Jeff Bezos
Jeff Benzos was the founder and chairman of Amazon. David Shaw was less well-known, but Woosung remembered reading about him in the book.
âHe is the founder of D.E. Shaw. Jeff Bezos is one of David Shawâs quants. He quit that job and later founded Amazon.â
Again, Yoon Gihwan was wowed.
âYou never disappoint me! If I may add, David Shaw was a genius computer scientist. At the time, talented traders were mostly mathematicians or statisticians. At first, no one paid attention to this computer scientist in stock trading.â
âHe suggested an algorithm of his own, which Morgan Stanley rejected at the time.â
Yoon Gihwan nodded.
âSo you read up on the history. Then, my last question is this. Why did I mention these three names?â
âThere are many types of quant. Some focus on making the algorithm while others specialize in the computer aspect of it. David Shaw used the computing power to increase the speed of the algorithm, while Fischer Black showed talent in creating the algorithms.â
It was a difference between the creator and the user, and rarely, some were talented at both.
Yoon Gihwan put down his marker and asked.
âWhat do you think you are?â
âI amâŠâ
Woosung became quiet. This was something he considered intently while reading the history of algorithm trading.
Choose and focus.
He only had a limited amount of time, so he had to make quick choices and focus on them. It was true he was smarter, but he wasnât a robot. He also didnât want to become a money-making machine. He wanted to exercise to become healthier and enjoy life while making good money. This was after his revenge though. Until then, he was ready to sacrifice everything.
âI plan on doing both. I will make the algorithm and use it myself to become successful.â
Woosungâs eyes looked crazy. Yoon Gihwan flinched at Woosungâs determination. It looked like Woosung was ready to do whatever was necessary, even murder. Yoon Gihwan knew he couldnât stop Woosung. It seemed pointless to tell him how hard it would be.
âIâŠI see.â
Yoon Gihwan was expecting Woosung to choose one or the other, but now he could only nod to Woosungâs answer.
âI plan on continuing to study statistics and mathematics. All you need to teach me is what you learned from your experience.â
Woosung understood statistics and mathematics were the foundations of creating algorithms.
âOh, I see.â Yoon Gihwan nodded.
***
Yoon Gihwan stopped asking questions and continued to explain his own past works.
âAt first, it was a very simple system. When the golden cross occurred, we bought, and when the death cross occurred, we sold.â
Golden cross.
It was a technical indicator occurring when the short term moving average crossed above the long-term mark. When it occurred, it meant there was a change of stock gains on the horizon.
On the other hand, death cross was a sign that short-term momentum in stock was slowing. It happened when a stockâs short-term moving average fell below its long-term moving average.
âThat was very simple.â
âBut it was still better than manual trading. Nobody could be as methodical as a computer system.â
Woosung agreed. He learned this as the chief of the server team at Bitmain.
âNext must be something more complex.â
âYes. We added more guidelines for the algorithm to follow including the candlestick patterns.â
âSo basically, you used the trend to follow a strategy?â
âYup, but then we came to a problem.â
âSpaghetti code.â
Spaghetti code.
It referred to the unstructured and difficult-to-maintain source code. To explain it simply, it was as if someone drew a yellow line on top of a black line, which they placed on top of a blue line.
âYes. We also tried to add indicators like MACD and Stochastics, which made it even harder. Refactoring these codes alone took over a month.â
âAnd following the rules everybody already knew wouldnât have made you a lot of money.â
Yoon Gihwan nodded and wrote more words on the board.
âSo we read the related academic articles. We wanted to make an algorithm the experts in the field already used but an average trader wouldnât know.â
Yoon Gihwan paused and looked at Woosung. He was challenging Woosung to guess the answer. Woosung contemplated.
âAre you referring to the pairs trading strategy?â
Read Latest Chapters at wuxiaworld.eu
Yoon Gihwan was again impressed.
âYou probably didnât have a long time to study, yet you did well.â
âAnything is better than dying.â
Yoon Gihwan shuttered at Woosungâs dark tone, but he quickly recovered and continued.