Academic contribution
is now considered less important in defense.- However, your thesis should contain new elements.
- What can your thesis add to the knowledge of people around you (vs human being)?
- The new elements do not have to be
great
,ingenious
,creative
,new
, etc. - You should provide answers to
research questions
- Asking a right question usually lead to good research.
- But
research questions
can be much broader than you think. (see below)
- New hypothesis, channels, econometric method, etc
- However, there is nothing new under the sun.
- Most of
new findings
are incremental or build upon existing findings. - There is always context why such new result came out.
- Tweak on an existing (established/well-known) research
- Extension of empirical evidence: China market data, etc
- Application of theory/model paper to empirical data (mix and match)
- But you need to justify why your topic is meaningful?
Research question
again!- Why testing against China data is meaningful? Any element in China data to strengthen/weaken the original paper?
- The same approach has been tried before?
- Extensive summary of existing methods
- Systematic comparison of the performance of existing methods / hypothesis
- When and why such one method is better than the ohters.
- Often, this of research leads to new ideas/finding.
- One important question in market microstructure is where does the price discovery occurs when similar products are traded in several markets. (E.g., stock vs futures)
- There are two important methods to measure the price discovery shares:
- Information Share: Hasbrouck, J., 1995. One Security, Many Markets: Determining the Contributions to Price Discovery. The Journal of Finance 50, 1175–1199.
- Component Share: Gonzalo, J., Granger, C., 1995. Estimation of Common Long-Memory Components in Cointegrated Systems. Journal of Business & Economic Statistics 13, 27–35.
- There is a paper systematically comparing the two is as famous as the two original ones:
- Baillie, R.T., Geoffrey Booth, G., Tse, Y., Zabotina, T., 2002. Price discovery and common factor models. Journal of Financial Markets 5, 309–321.
- SABR volatility model is one of the most popular stochastic volatility model to explain volatility smile.
- The original paper provided an approximate formula to quickly compute the Black-Scholes volatility. However, this formula is not very accurate.
- Several improvements have been proposed. Each claim that the method is superior to the original method. However there is no research comparing the new methods.
- So I posted a question on Quant StachExchange. No answer. So I proposed this as a thesis topic.
- Zhang, Z., 2019.
Who is the winner of the analytic approximations for the SABR model?
(mathesis). Peking University HSBC Business School, Shenzhen, China. - Drawback: lacks
-
Topic does not have to be so big. You may set a small goal, but plan to achieve it thoroughly. Then, ideas will follow soon.
Though beginning seems humble, future will be prosperous
Start from where you are, not from where you want to be
Stay hungry. Stay foolish.
-
Find topic around you:
- Any topic related to courses you took?
- Any topic you were curious?
- Any topic you think is not correct?
- Any topic you want to thoroughly understand (i.e. survey)?
- Can you improve any course project you did?
-
Be creative and critical in choosing topic. Keep asking questions!
-
Regardless of the "contents" of the thsis, you have to try your best to see your paper (make it look good).
- Argue the reseasrch question is important. (Even if it is not so important.)
- Argue your approach is meaningful. (Even if it is not so meaningful.)
- Argue you made a contribution. (Even if there's not much contribution.)
- In order to make better arguments above, you have to think/read/study very hard.
- It will be a great learning process you take away with graduation and a great skill set for your career.