Faculty
                     
                  
                  
                     
                        
                           
                              
                                 
                                    
                                 
                              
                           
                        
                     
                  
                     Research Professor, Director for Quantitative Finance
                     Ph.D., 1986
                     Stony Brook University: Quantitative Finance 
                  
                     Robert Frey had worked in an array of operations research related managerial positions
                        before earning his Applied Math PhD in 1986.  Then he became involved in designing
                        mathematically based financial trading systems, first at Morgan Stanley, then at Kepler
                        Associates, and finally at Renaissance Technologies, from which he retired at the
                        rank of Managing Director in 2004.  Among his many current activities, he chairs the
                        advisory committee of the U. of Chicago Financial Mathematics program (the country’s
                        top ranked quantitative finance program), is co-owner of a small investment bank in
                        London, and heads a construction company. Frey just launched his own hedge fund, Frey
                        Quantitative Strategies, with initial capital of $365 million.
                     
                     
                        Office: Math Tower 1-103
                     
                     
                        Phone: 631-473-6314
                     
                  
                     
                        
                     
                  
Stan Uryasev
                        Professor and 
                           Frey Family Endowed Chair,  Co Director for Quantitative Finance 
                        
                        Ph.D., 1983,  Glushkov Institute of Cybernetics: Applied Mathematics 
                     
His research and teaching interests include quantitative finance, risk management, stochastic optimization, machine learning, and military operations research. His joint paper with Prof. Rockafellar on Optimization of Conditional Value-At-Risk in The Journal of Risk, Vol. 2, No. 3, 2000 is among the 100 most cited papers in Finance. Many risk management/optimization packages implemented the approach suggested in this paper (MATLAB implemented a toolbox).
                        
                           Office: Math Tower, Room B-148
                           Phone: 631-632-5470
                           http://uryasev.ams.stonybrook.edu/  
                        
                     
                     
                        
                     
                  
                     
                        
                           Andrew Mullhaupt
                        
                     
                     Research Professor, Ph.D., 1984
                     New York University: Quantitative Finance
                     
                  
                     Andrew Mullhaupt's original research interests involved partial differential equations
                        and linear algebra. He has worked on Wall Street for over 20 years designing mathematically
                        based trading systems, first at Morgan Stanley, then at Renaissance Technologies,
                        and most recently at S A C Capital where he was Director of Research for the SAC's
                        Meridian Fund.
                     
                     
                        Office: Mathematics Tower B-148
                     
                     
                        Phone: 631-632-5479
                     
                  
                     Assistant Professor, Ph.D., 2014
Swiss Finance Institute: Computational Statistics
Pawel Polak's expertise is in machine learning, big data, predictive modeling, and
                        signal processing with shrinkage and regularization. His research involves statistical
                        modeling of large-dimensional stochastic processes with heavy-tailed distributions,
                        sparse signal processing with breakpoints, and multivariate time series analysis models
                        arising in a variety of settings, ranging from portfolio optimization, factor modeling,
                        asset pricing, multivariate volatility modeling, risk prediction, and options pricing.
                     
                  
                     
                        
                           
                              Office: Mathematics Tower B-148
                           
                           
                              Phone: TBA
                           
                        
                     
                  
                     
                        
                     
                  
                     
                        Associate Professor, Ph.D., 2005
                     
                     Stanford University:Financial Statistics, Change Point  Methods
                        
                     
                  
                     Haipeng Xing is a statistician whose research is focused on: (i)  change-points detection,
                        parameter estimation and adaptive control  problems and their applications in engineering,
                        economics and 4genetics; (ii) statistical models and methods in financial econometrics
                         and engineering; and (iii) time series modeling.  He is co-author, with T.L. Lai
                        of Stanford, of a widely used graduate textbook on financial statistics. 
                     
                     
                        Office: Math Tower 1-102
                     
                     
                        Phone: 631-632-1892