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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/G036306/1
Title: Doctoral Training Centre in Financial Computing
Principal Investigator: Treleaven, Professor P
Other Investigators:
Shawe-Taylor, Professor JS Emmerich, Professor W Weber, Professor W
Webb, Professor DC
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
Aspect Capital Barclays Bank Plc Bnp Paribas
Citigroup Credit Suisse Deutsche Bank AG (UK)
Dubai International Financial Center Financial Services Skills Council Goldman Sachs International
HSBC Lloyds Tsb Bank Plc Man Investment Products Ltd
Merrill Lynch Morgan Stanley Nomura International Plc
Qatar Financial Centre Royal Bank of Scotland Santander UK plc
Thomson Reuters Foundation UBS
Department: Computer Science
Organisation: UCL
Scheme: Centre for Doctoral Training
Starts: 01 October 2009 Ends: 31 March 2018 Value (£): 7,516,737
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Artificial Intelligence Economics
Human-Computer Interactions Management & Business Studies
Networks & Distributed Systems Software Engineering
Statistics & Appl. Probability
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
Financial Services
Related Grants:
Panel History:  
Summary on Grant Application Form
The financial services industry is at the forefront of the digital economy, and is crucial to the UK's, and especially London's, continuing social and economic prosperity. State-of-the-art Financial IT, Computational Finance and Financial Engineering (collectively Financial Computing) research is crucial to our international competitiveness in investment banking, investment funds or retail banking. Academically this DTC focuses on financial computing, as distinct from quantitative finance, already well resourced. Banks and funds view PhD students in science and engineering as an increasingly important and largely untapped talent pool; although one regrettably with little knowledge of finance. The Financial Services Skills Council notes that employers are placing increasing importance on high-level analytical skills, as well as their acute shortage, especially in the newly emerging areas that drive sector growth. This centre completely embraces the spirit of the Digital Economy programme. The proposed DTC is inherently multidisciplinary involving UCL Computer Science, one of the largest leading departments in its field in the UK, with LSE Finance and the London Business School; the two leading academic finance centres in the UK. Key to developing the financial services industry in the Digital Economy is the creation of a new cohort of researchers who have a strong research capability in IT and computation, but also understand finance and the needs of the wholesale financial services industry leading to early adoption of new financial information technology research.The research groups and centres that will participate in this DTC include worldclass groups at: UCL, such as the Software Systems Engineering Group and the Centre for Computational Statistics and Machine Learning, at LSE such as Financial Markets Group, and at the London Business School, including the Management Science and Operations and Finance Subject Areas. The total value of active grants currently held by the participating groups and centres exceeds 20 Million Pounds, and the number of currently registered PhD students exceeds 130. Collaborators in Statistics, Economics, Mathematics and Physics supplement the potential Supervisor pool.A great strength of this DTC proposal is our industry partners, which include: Abbey, Barclays, Barclays Capital, BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Lloyds TSB, Man Investments, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Nomura, RBS and Thomson Reuters. Regarding training and supervision, each DTC PhD student will follow a personally tailored programme of postgraduate courses drawn from the partners covering financial IT, networks & communications, HCI, computational finance, financial engineering and business, supplemented by lectures from our industry partners: * A tailored educational programme comprising graduate-level courses from UCL, LSE and LBS. * An academic supervisor (from UCL, LSE or LBS) and an industrial advisor (a partner bank, fund or Reuters), and a programme of research covered by an MOU. * A research project in financial IT, computational finance or financial engineering. * Training in industry software, such as Reuters 3000 Xtra, through UCL's virtual training floor.* A substantial period of industrial placement as agreed between the academic and industrial supervisors.* A short period at a leading foreign academic centre
Key Findings
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Potential use in non-academic contexts
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Summary
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