adverse selection in the option job market

adverse selection in the option job market

Friends,

Today I’m going to both be a student and speaker at Ricki Heicklen’s Quantitative Bootcamp in Berkeley. Ricki is a Jane Street alum who got on my radar when I heard her interview with Patrick Mackenzie.

I summarized the convo in A Jane Street Alum Teaches Trading but it’s still a long article. The interview is dense with insight. Very rare for this stuff to be presented in such an accessible way in public.

Early in the interview Patrick asks Ricki to complete this sentence:

“I’m going to impart a bit of information upon you to get you ready for understanding the US equities markets…” – if you only had one sentence, what is that?

Ricki, without hesitation:

The number one sentence for purposes of trading, in general, is to think about?adverse selection.

The questionnaire she give to incoming students is loaded with tricky examples of adverse selection hiding in seemingly innocuous scenarios. You can get some flavor of this in her post Toward a Broader Conception of Adverse Selection .


??Aside: Polling has been a popular topic recently for obvious reasons. Adverse selection is a sibling of sampling bias. It’s the mother of monkeywrenches in statistics. This back and forth between Ben Orlin and Jim O’Shaughnessy has several fun, yet profound, examples of sampling bias.

Mathematician Ben Orlin on Infinite Loops podcast audio & transcript (6 min )


Fellow Jane Street alum, Agustin Lebron, has also emphasized the significance of adverse selection. In his exceptional book, Law of Trading (my notes ), chapter 1 is about motivation. Chapter 2 is, you guessed it, Adverse Selection.

[The obsession here is not misplaced. SIG or any other market maker is going to dwell on this because markets are not kindergarten — your counterparty wants to make money by disagreeing with you so understanding if they are safe to trade against is the a primary objective.]

The chapter includes several great examples of adverse selection in financial markets, but as every chapter does, it closes with practical applications that are pertinent to anyone not just traders. I’ll use this extended excerpt about adverse selection in the labor market to setup today’s discussion (emphasis mine):

Adverse selection in the job market appears on the side of both the employer and the prospective employee. Employees are looking for the most attractive job they can find, while employers are looking for the best candidate for the job.

A reasonable blanket assumption is the employer faces a larger adverse selection problem than the candidate.

But what I want to talk about is how with experienced option traders I have seen this flipped. Well, maybe not flipped, that’s hard to say but I can pinpoint a somewhat narrow but substantial area of adverse selection that I’d expect was more prominent in the past 5 years.

Whenever I have a call with a trader evaluating an opportunity I warn them about this because I’ve seen it time and time again.

No math or charts today. This is a topic for experienced professional option traders although I’d bet it could be generalized faithfully to anyone with valuable experience who is being sought after. You can make the adjustments for your own field.


I’m going to be very direct since you are not a learner or novice. If you’re at this point you understand the angles. You are already damn good at what you do. The failure mode here has nothing to do with your competence as an option trader or risk taker.


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