Robert F. Engle profile photo

Robert F. Engle

  • Professor Emeritus of Finance
  • Co-Director, The Volatility and Risk Institute

Joined Stern 2000

re21@stern.nyu.edu

Leonard N. Stern School of Business

Kaufman Management Center

44 West Fourth Street, 9-62

New York, NY 10012

Personal Website

About Robert F. Engle

Robert Engle was awarded the 2003 Nobel Prize in Economics for his research on the concept of autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticity (ARCH). He developed this method for statistical modeling of time-varying volatility and demonstrated that these techniques accurately capture the properties of many time series. Professor Engle shared the prize with Clive W. J. Granger of the University of California at San Diego.

Professor Engle is an expert in time series analysis with a long-standing interest in the analysis of financial markets. His ARCH model and its generalizations have become indispensable tools not only for researchers, but also for analysts of financial markets, who use them in asset pricing and in evaluating portfolio risk. His research has also produced such innovative statistical methods as cointegration, common features, autoregressive conditional duration (ACD), CAViaR and now dynamic conditional correlation (DCC) models.

He is currently the Co-Director of the NYU Stern Volatility and Risk Institute and is the Co-Founding President of the Society for Financial Econometrics (SoFiE), a global non-profit organization housed at NYU. Before joining NYU Stern in 2000, Professor Engle was Chancellor's Associates Professor and Economics Department Chair at the University of California, San Diego, and Associate Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

He received his bachelor of science in physics from Williams College and his master of science in physics and doctor of philosophy in economics from Cornell University. Born in Syracuse, NY, he grew up in Media, Pennsylvania, spent 25 years in San Diego, and now lives in New York.

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  • Finance
  • Salomon Center for the Study of Financial Institutions
  • Volatility and Risk Institute
  • Econometrics
  • Empirical Market Microstructure
  • Economics
    • Econometrics
    • Economic Indicators
    • Interest Rates
    • International Economic Policy
    • Volatility
  • Finance
    • Currencies & Exchange Rates
    • Derivatives
    • Financial Exchanges and Clearing Houses
    • Financial Regulation
    • High Frequency Trading
  • Futures and Options
  • Topics in Financial Econometrics
  • Ph.D., Economics, 1969

    Cornell University

  • M.S., Physics, 1966

    Cornell University

  • B.A., Physics, 1964

    Williams College

  • Member, International Advisory Panel, Risk Management Institute (2012)

  • Distinguished Alumni Award, Cornell University, Department of Statistical Science (2011)

  • Financial Engineer of the Year Award, IAFE/SunGard (2011)

  • Distinguished Visiting Scholar, UNC Chapel Hill Kenan-Flagler Business School (2010)

  • Member, Joint CFTC-SEC Committee (2010)

  • Presidential Medal, Hofstra University (2009)

  • Member, World Economic Forum (2007)

  • Nobel Prize for Economics, National Academy of Sciences (2003)

  • Robert Engle, Riccardo Colacito and Eric Ghysels (2011)

    A Component Model of Dynamic Correlations

    ournal of Econometrics (2011) 164: 45-59

  • Robert Engle (2011)

    Long-Term Skewness and Systemic Risk

    Journal of Financial Econometrics (2011) 9(3): 437-468

  • Robert Engle (2011)

    What is Happening with Financial Market Volatility and Why?

    in Volatility - Risk and Uncertainty in Financial Markets (Springer Science + Business Media, 2011

  • Robert Engle and Turan Bali (2010)

    The Intertemporal Capital Asset Pricing Model with Dynamic Conditional Correlations

    Journal of Monetary Economics (May 2010) 57(4), 377-390

  • Robert Engle, Magdalena E. Sokalska and Ananda Chanda

    High Frequency Multiplicative Component GARCH

    Journal of Financial Econometrics (forthcoming)