Published: Nov. 4, 2022

From Business at Leeds 2022 |听Full issue

Diego Alvarez poses in downtown Manhattan near the World Trade Center.

Diego Alvarez stands in lower Manhattan near the World Trade Center. He took advantage of Leeds resources to further his passion for quantitative finance.

Diego Alvarez walks the streets of lower Manhattan.When the Rustandy Building opened its doors in 2021, we knew that the fusion of the engineering and business schools would ignite exceptional opportunities for students. One year later, we wanted to see what that looked like. Here are a few stories that caught our eye.

Diego Alvarez (Math, Econ鈥22) didn鈥檛 major in business or engineering颅鈥攂ut he works in both areas now. Back in fifth grade, his fascination with quantum physics evolved into a lifelong passion for quantitative finance鈥攁 mix of business and science.听

While at 欧美口爆视频 Boulder, he used what he learned from elective math courses at the College of Engineering and Applied Science in his work at the Bloomberg Lab and Leeds鈥 Burridge Center for Finance. There, he joined the Leeds Investment Trading Group and started 欧美口爆视频 Quants, a group for quantitative people interested in finance.听

Now living in New York City, he鈥檚 found an ideal balance between the disciplines as a data scientist at a hedge fund.

鈥淎lmost everything I learned in the Stochastic Finance course at the engineering school, I use in my work today,鈥 he said.

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