The birth of computational finance as a discipline can be traced to Harry Markowitz in the early 1950s. Markowitz conceived of the portfolio selection problem as an exercise in mean-variance optimization. This required more computer power than was available at the time, so he worked on useful algorithms for approximate solutions.[7] Mathematical finance began with the same insight, but diverged by making simplifying assumptions to express relations in simple closed forms that did not require sophisticated computer science to evaluate.[8]
By the end of the 1980s, the winding down of the Cold War brought a large group of displaced physicists and applied mathematicians, many from behind the Iron Curtain, into finance. These people become known as "financial engineers" ("quant" is a term that includes both rocket scientists and financial engineers, as well as quantitative portfolio managers).[13] This led to a second major extension of the range of computational methods used in finance, also a move away from personal computers to mainframes and supercomputers.[11] Around this time computational finance became recognized as a distinct academic subfield. The first degree program in computational finance was offered by Carnegie Mellon University in 1994.[14]
Over the last 20 years, the field of computational finance has expanded into virtually every area of finance, and the demand for practitioners has grown dramatically.[1] Moreover, many specialized companies have grown up to supply computational finance software and services.[10]
^Cornelis A. Los, Computational Finance World Scientific Pub Co Inc (December 2000) ISBN978-9810244972
^Mario J. Miranda and Paul L. Fackler, Applied Computational Economics and Finance, The MIT Press (September 16, 2002) ISBN978-0262134200
^Omur Ugur, Introduction to Computational Finance, Imperial College Press (December 22, 2008) ISBN978-1848161924
^Jin-Chuan Duan, Wolfgang Karl Härdle and James E. Gentle (editors), Handbook of Computational Finance, Springer (October 25, 2011) ISBN978-3642172533
^Harry M. Markowitz, Portfolio Selection: Efficient Diversification of Investments, Wiley, second edition (September 3, 1991) 978-1557861085
^ abJustin Fox, The Myth of the Rational Market: A History of Risk, Reward, and Delusion on Wall Street, HarperBusiness (June 9, 2009) ISBN978-0060598990
^William Poundstone, Fortune's Formula: The Untold Story of the Scientific Betting System That Beat the Casinos and Wall Street, Hill and Wang (September 19, 2006) ISBN978-0809045990
^ abMichael Goodkin, The Wrong Answer Faster: The Inside Story of Making the Machine that Trades Trillions, Wiley, (February 21, 2012) ISBN978-1118133408
^ abAaron Brown, Red-Blooded Risk: The Secret History of Wall Street, Wiley (October 11, 2011) ISBN978-1118043868
^ abJohn F. Ehlers, Rocket Science for Traders, Wiley (July 20, 2001) ISBN978-0471405672
^Aaron Brown, The Poker Face of Wall Street, Wiley (March 31, 2006) 978-0470127315