“Quants are no different from any other investor, in that in order to model a particular company’s future earnings, you also have to model its customers and competitors around the world,” he said. Kahn did not wish to speak directly against the prospects of boutiques performing quantitative management. It’s a slightly sensitive point, given his erstwhile colleague and co-author of definitive quant handbooks, Richard Grinold, has recently given private backing to the start-up of another former BGI investment executive, Morry Waked. However, Kahn did allow that scientific investing was a “scale business…four guys sitting around a Bloomberg terminal in a crowded room probably isn’t enough.”
Kahn said he had observed US and European pension funds make big shifts into passive investing, but was confident it was a “temporary retreat”, to be expected given the volatile state of the markets. “While average active managers underperform, successful active management – scientific and fundamental – is possible. Nothing in the financial crisis leads us to believe that stock prices today capture value any better than they did [before].”







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