
Kay Giesecke
· Professor of Management Science and EngineeringVerifiedStanford University · Management Science and Engineering
Active 2001–2026
About
Kay Giesecke is a Professor of Management Science & Engineering at Stanford University, where he has been on the faculty since 2005. He is the Founder and Director of Stanford's Advanced Financial Technologies Laboratory, the Director of the Mathematical and Computational Finance Program, and a member of the Institute for Computational and Mathematical Engineering. His research sits at the intersection of technology and finance, focusing on transforming risk intelligence, market oversight, and investment management through the development of stochastic models, statistical machine learning methods, computational algorithms, and software. His key application areas include risk management, market surveillance, fair lending, and sustainable investing, with his work informing financial regulation, guiding institutional practices, and contributing to more transparent, resilient, and equitable financial systems.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Political Science
- Computer Security
- Economics
- Management science
- Business
- Engineering
- Actuarial science
- Finance
- Data science
Selected publications
Online Conformal Prediction for Non-Exchangeable Panel Data
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2026-05-18
preprintOpen accessSenior authorPanel data, in which multiple units are repeatedly observed over time, arise throughout science and engineering. Quantifying predictive uncertainty in such settings is challenging because conformal prediction, while distribution-free and model-agnostic, classically relies on exchangeability assumptions that fail under temporal dependence and unit heterogeneity. We propose a simple online conformal framework for non-exchangeable panel data. The method exploits a key feature of online panel prediction: when a forecast is required for one unit, contemporaneous outcomes from related units may already be observed and can serve as a calibration panel. At each round, prediction sets are formed using currently observed calibration units together with two adaptive quantities: history-based similarity weights that emphasize calibration units resembling the target, and an adaptive miscoverage level that is updated whenever target feedback is revealed. This two-state design yields a stepwise coverage bound and a long-run coverage guarantee. Empirically, across synthetic and real panel data sets, the method improves coverage on the worst-covered target units through adaptive interval-width allocation rather than uniform inflation. The two states are complementary: similarity weights protect coverage when target feedback is sparse, while the adaptive level further improves coverage as feedback accumulates.
Online Conformal Prediction for Non-Exchangeable Panel Data
ArXiv.org · 2026-05-18
articleOpen accessSenior authorPanel data, in which multiple units are repeatedly observed over time, arise throughout science and engineering. Quantifying predictive uncertainty in such settings is challenging because conformal prediction, while distribution-free and model-agnostic, classically relies on exchangeability assumptions that fail under temporal dependence and unit heterogeneity. We propose a simple online conformal framework for non-exchangeable panel data. The method exploits a key feature of online panel prediction: when a forecast is required for one unit, contemporaneous outcomes from related units may already be observed and can serve as a calibration panel. At each round, prediction sets are formed using currently observed calibration units together with two adaptive quantities: history-based similarity weights that emphasize calibration units resembling the target, and an adaptive miscoverage level that is updated whenever target feedback is revealed. This two-state design yields a stepwise coverage bound and a long-run coverage guarantee. Empirically, across synthetic and real panel data sets, the method improves coverage on the worst-covered target units through adaptive interval-width allocation rather than uniform inflation. The two states are complementary: similarity weights protect coverage when target feedback is sparse, while the adaptive level further improves coverage as feedback accumulates.
AICO: Feature Significance Tests for Supervised Learning
ArXiv.org · 2025-06-29
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingMachine learning is central to modern science, industry, and policy, yet its predictive power often comes at the cost of transparency: we rarely know which input features truly drive a model's predictions. Without such understanding, researchers cannot draw reliable conclusions, practitioners cannot ensure fairness or accountability, and policymakers cannot trust or govern model-based decisions. Existing tools for assessing feature influence are limited; most lack statistical guarantees, and many require costly retraining or surrogate modeling, making them impractical for large modern models. We introduce AICO, a broadly applicable framework that turns model interpretability into an efficient statistical exercise. AICO tests whether each feature genuinely improves predictive performance by masking its information and measuring the resulting change. The method provides exact, finite-sample feature p-values and confidence intervals for feature importance through a simple, non-asymptotic hypothesis testing procedure. It requires no retraining, surrogate modeling, or distributional assumptions, making it feasible for large-scale algorithms. In both controlled experiments and real applications, from credit scoring to mortgage-behavior prediction, AICO reliably identifies the variables that drive model behavior, providing a scalable and statistically principled path toward transparent and trustworthy machine learning.
<p>A Set-Sequence Model for Time Series</p>
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen accessSenior authorSSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen access1st authorCorrespondingLearning Illiquid Asset Prices
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen accessSenior authorPredicting Rating Transitions using Machine Learning
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2025-01-01
preprintOpen accessA Set-Sequence Model for Time Series
ArXiv.org · 2025-05-16
preprintOpen accessSenior authorMany prediction problems across science and engineering, especially in finance and economics, involve large cross-sections of individual time series, where each unit (e.g., a loan, stock, or customer) is driven by unit-level features and latent cross-sectional dynamics. While sequence models have advanced per-unit temporal prediction, capturing cross-sectional effects often still relies on hand-crafted summary features. We propose Set-Sequence, a model that learns cross-sectional structure directly, enhancing expressivity and eliminating manual feature engineering. At each time step, a permutation-invariant Set module summarizes the unit set; a Sequence module then models each unit's dynamics conditioned on both its features and the learned summary. The architecture accommodates unaligned series, supports varying numbers of units at inference, integrates with standard sequence backbones (e.g., Transformers), and scales linearly in cross-sectional size. Across a synthetic contagion task and two large-scale real-world applications, equity portfolio optimization and loan risk prediction, Set-Sequence significantly outperforms strong baselines, delivering higher Sharpe ratios, improved AUCs, and interpretable cross-sectional summaries.
Management Science · 2024-08-20 · 3 citations
paratextCall for Papers—<i>Management Science</i> Virtual Special Issue on Digital Finance
Management Science · 2024-07-08 · 1 citations
paratext
Recent grants
Statistical Methods for Large Interacting Systems and Applications to Mortgage Pools
NSF · $220k · 2013–2016
Frequent coauthors
- 27 shared
Justin Sirignano
University of Oxford
- 17 shared
Richard B. Sowers
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- 16 shared
Konstantinos Spiliopoulos
- 15 shared
Lisa R. Goldberg
University of California, Berkeley
- 14 shared
Francis A. Longstaff
- 13 shared
Baeho Kim
Korea University
- 12 shared
Ilya A. Strebulaev
National Bureau of Economic Research
- 12 shared
Stephen M. Schaefer
Arizona State University
Education
- 2000
Ph.D., Management Science and Engineering
Stanford University
- 1995
M.S., Management Science and Engineering
Stanford University
- 1990
B.S., Operations Research and Industrial Engineering
University of California, Berkeley
Awards & honors
- JP Morgan AI Faculty Research Award (2019)
- SIAM Financial Mathematics and Engineering Conference Paper…
- Fama/DFA Prize for the Best Asset Pricing Paper in the Journ…
- Gauss Prize of the Society for Actuarial and Financial Mathe…
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