Disrupting the Prediction of Financial Markets with Arnav Sheth

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Disruption Interruption podcast host and veteran communications disruptor, Karla Jo Helms, interviews mathematician Arnav Sheth about how he is disrupting the prediction of financial markets.

TAMPA BAY, Fla. (PRWEB) August 03, 2022

On February 19, 2020, the stock market reached its peak before COVID-19 took its toll.¹ While there have been clear winners since the start of the pandemic, such as businesses in the online shopping, remote education, and telemedicine sectors, the market overall has experienced a significant drop.

Now, with the Federal Reserve's highest rate hike in 28 years, continued tensions abroad, and supply chain issues affecting nearly every sector, investors are understandably wondering what is next to come.² Amidst all this doom and gloom is one disruptor who is looking to change how the prediction of financial markets takes place.

For Arnav Sheth, the love of math all began when he met a professor who showed him just how beautiful the subject could be. This disruptive moment put Sheth on the path he now traverses today as a data scientist, consultant, and formerly a tenured professor and teacher of mathematics at Concourse within MIT.

Today, Sheth is disrupting the prediction of financial markets using statistical and machine learning techniques. While this might sound like Sheth has the magic bullet for financial success, He has a way of reminding his audience that math is a slow and steady march forward.

Sheth speaks about how:

1.    Disruption for him has always been about trouble-making for good. By making waves in his industry and within academia, he has been able to disrupt the status quo.
2.    Agreeability is often cherished and even respected in the world of academics. In many cases, extremely agreeable yet highly incompetent people will ascend the ladder. A true disruptor is willing to shake things up amidst these norms.
3.    Disruption comes with failure. Not every attempt to disrupt the current way of things results in a win. The key is to keep on trying again and again.
4.    With the Federal government intervening to raise interest rates, the financial market is undergoing its own disruption. Savvy investors will pay careful attention without overreacting to market changes.
5.    Disruptors in the financial sector can often look like boring people, but they're busy changing really tiny things within a large machine. It's a slow process of working on one small cog, taking off the cog, and replacing it with a shiny new, better working, well oiled, smoother one. Slowly, cog by cog, the machine is dismantled and replaced.
6.    People have a misconception that machine learning is a sort of magic bullet. While humanity has computational power unlike any before, it's not magic and retains limitations.
7.    Investors mustn't impose their own views on the market. The markets are what they are, and they're going to do what they're going to do. Whether or not one thinks they should be doing something, they're going to be doing it anyway. It's better to accept what the markets are and where they're going and what they're doing rather than try to impose one's own view onto them.

Disruption Interruption is the podcast where you'll hear from today's biggest Industry Disruptors. Learn what motivated them to bring about change and how they overcome opposition to adoption.

Disruption Interruption can be listened to via the Podbean app and is available on Apple's App Store and Google Play.

About Disruption Interruption:
Disruption is happening on an unprecedented scale, impacting all manner of industries — MedTech, Finance, IT, eCommerce, shipping and logistics, and more — and COVID has moved their timelines up a full decade or more. But WHO are these disruptors, and when did they say, "THAT'S IT! I'VE HAD IT!"? Time to Disrupt and Interrupt with host Karla Jo "KJ" Helms, veteran communications disruptor.

KJ interviews badasses who are disrupting their industries and altering economic networks that have become antiquated with an establishment resistant to progress. She delves into uncovering secrets from industry rebels and quiet revolutionaries that uncover common traits — and not-so-common — that are changing our economic markets… and lives. Visit the world's key pioneers that persist toward success, despite arrows in their backs at http://www.disruptioninterruption.com.

About Karla Jo Helms:
Karla Jo Helms is the Chief Evangelist and Anti-PR(TM) Strategist for JOTO PR Disruptors(TM).

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Karla Jo learned firsthand how unforgiving business can be when millions of dollars are on the line — and how the control of public opinion often determines whether one company is happily chosen or another is brutally rejected.

As alumni of crisis management, Karla Jo has worked with litigation attorneys, private investigators, and the media to help restore companies of goodwill back into the good graces of public opinion — Karla Jo operates on the ethic of getting it right the first time, not relying on second chances and doing what it takes to excel. Helms speaks globally on public relations, how the PR industry itself has lost its way and how, in the right hands, corporations can harness the power of Anti-PR to drive markets and impact market perception.

About Arnav Sheth:
Arnav Sheth is a researcher, data scientist, formerly tenured professor of finance, founder of a FinTech program, and former director of an MS in Finance program. Currently, Sheth teaches mathematics at MIT. As Principal at Gaji Analytics, he has consulted in the quantitative finance space for several years. Sheth also works with Minerva University, teaching strategic finance, and consulting in educational technology at Minerva Project.

In prior lives, Sheth was a tenured professor in finance at Saint Mary's College; and an economist with Deloitte Tax, where he started work on the day Lehman crashed (September 15, 2008) and, as one of his friends put it, "broke the economy on his first day out in the real world."  

1.    Bradley, Chris and Stumpner, Peter. "The impact of COVID-19 on capital markets, one year in." March 10, 2021, McKinsey & Company, mckinsey.com/business-functions/strategy-and-corporate-finance/our-insights/the-impact-of-covid-19-on-capital-markets-one-year-in.
2.    Vaugh, Harlan. "These Experts Predict the Worst Is Yet To Come in the Stock Market. Here's Why — And How To Prepare." June 17, 2022, Next Advisor; time.com/nextadvisor/investing/experts-predict-stock-market-2022/.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: https://www.prweb.com/releases/disrupting_the_prediction_of_financial_markets_with_arnav_sheth/prweb18826544.htm

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