Acadia launches derivatives pricing education initiative with Northeastern U

Acadia has partnered with the Northeastern University D’Amore-McKim School of Business to offer a new and highly-interactive, globally accessible, professional certification program (non-degree, non-credit) for derivatives pricing and risk modeling.

It will dive beyond basic derivatives pricing and risk concepts into advanced industry applications through real-world examples, self-guided exercises, and live facilitated sessions with D’Amore-McKim School of Business faculty, Acadia leadership, and other industry experts.

The program is designed for recent graduates and professionals with basic quantitative finance, risk management, and financial modeling experience, with some knowledge of C++ and/or Python preferred though not strictly required. Upon completion of the program, participants will receive a Northeastern University digital credential, which will provide individuals with a competitive advantage in the quantitative finance derivatives risk management job market – a high-potential and high-demand niche in the financial services industry.

Learners will get hands-on experience, working closely with and contributing to the Open Source Risk Engine (ORE), a software toolkit used by Acadia for its hosted risk services and also locally in production at several large banks, hedge funds, and asset managers, facilitated by ORE’s founding authors at Acadia. ORE was developed as a free and open-source platform for pricing and risk analytics of traded instruments, providing contemporary market and credit risk analytics that meet post-2008 heightened industry requirements.

Featured lecturers will include Scott Sobolewski and Roland Lichters, Acadia’s co-heads of Quantitative Services, and Felipe Cortes, D’Amore-McKim School of Business Associate Teaching Professor of Finance.

Lichters said in a statement, “Regulatory and structural changes have fundamentally transformed the financial services industry, creating unprecedented levels of complexity in the market. We firmly believe that having freely available, standardized tools to navigate such complexity should be accessible to all, which is why open-source technology is so crucial. In crafting this course, we’ve kept the priorities of those in the quantitative finance space top of mind, offering unparalleled access to cutting edge derivatives pricing and risk technology through ORE.”

David Madigan, provost and senior vice president for Academic Affairs at Northeastern University, said in a statement: “We look forward to welcoming the future leaders of the derivatives market, ranging from recent graduates, quantitative analysts, financial engineers, risk managers, and more.”

Source

Related Posts

Previous Post
ECB’s Panetta flags “critical blind spots” to the CMU
Next Post
CCMA T+1 update: TMX developing securities lending portal

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

X

Reset password

Create an account