TROY — Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Stevens Institute of Technology announced today that they have been awarded the first-ever National Science Foundation grant to create an industry-university cooperative research center devoted specifically to financial technology and science.
The Center for Research toward Advancing Financial Technologies, or CRAFT, led by Aparna Gupta at the Lally School of Management at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Steve Yang and George Calhoun at the School of Business at Stevens, underscores the nation’s strategic investment in managing risks and unintended consequences of the emerging – and yet unknown – challenges facing the high-tech financial services industry.
“From its conceptualization and through more than two years of groundwork to build CRAFT, we have created a vibrant community of multidisciplinary researchers and industry professionals enthusiastic to address a range of technology and innovation challenges facing the financial services sector,” said Gupta, who leads CRAFT at Rensselaer. “Rensselaer’s culture of highly interdisciplinary research, innovative spirit, and a rich technological research portfolio are the most attractive assets for CRAFT.”
Together, Rensselaer and Stevens will bring together industry and academic partners, and policy makers involved in high-impact research efforts, to conduct research that is relevant for industry and has potential for commercialization. CRAFT is expected to receive approximately $1 million in funding in the initial year of operation, with $300,000 provided by the NSF annually over the five-year grant period and the remainder funded by its industry members. Stevens will serve as the administrative lead institution in compliance with NSF’s newly issued rules of designating a lead institution for all industry-university cooperative research centers.
Already, 18 financial services organizations, including global leaders of the industry, have pledged their support for CRAFT. As advanced technologies are rapidly shaping financial services and systems and impacting society at-large, commitment from industry partners and policy makers will help drive innovation in fintech, address the challenges impacting the finance industry, and help develop a diverse, exceptionally skilled high-tech workforce.
“The federal government’s investment in CRAFT demonstrates the critical need for collaborative fintech research and policy initiatives to guide the industry in this high-tech transformation,” said Yang, who led the grant proposal from its inception. “Stevens’ location in Hoboken, N.J., and expertise in both technology and business, coupled with our strong relationships with financial firms, make us well-positioned to be a true partner in applied research to corporations as we look to grow the number of university and industry partners.”
Among the initial research areas of focus will be cybersecurity; high-frequency automated markets; technology risk and regulation; commercialization; and applications of blockchain, quantum computing, natural language processing, artificial intelligence, and machine learning. Much of the work on the CRAFT research projects will be carried out by students at the participating universities, providing an essential training ground for the future fintech workforce.
The Hanlon Financial Systems Center, which includes two game-changing financial analytics labs, challenges students in Stevens’ fintech-related bachelor’s and master’s degree programs to apply fintech solutions to real-world business problems. This resource, paired with Rensselaer’s specialized master’s degree program in Quantitative Finance and Risk Analytics and other key fintech assets and programs, will be key to advancing the CRAFT agenda.
“From lowering costs and eliminating human error, to greater regulatory compliance and improved security, AI will improve financial services in unimaginable ways,” said Chanaka Edirisinghe, the acting dean of the Lally School of Management at Rensselaer. “This new center will position Rensselaer as a leader in fintech innovation through its many interdisciplinary collaborations within the Institute and between our two institutions.”
In the past few months, those disruptions include the short squeeze on GameStop and a major computer attack that crippled nearly half the East Coast’s fuel supply, leading the Department of Homeland Security to move to regulate cybersecurity in the pipeline industry for the first time. CRAFT will address how to both address and mitigate these challenges as the financial services industry continues its rapid transformation into the high-tech, big data world.
“This is a crucial opportunity for industry and academia to work together to define the most pressing challenges and find solutions that will have a real and lasting impact on the economy,” said Gregory Prastacos, dean of the School of Business at Stevens. “The aim of these research projects is to produce innovative fintech products and services, while also enabling industry participants and policy makers to better understand how to reduce the possibility of unintended consequences and disruptions.”
Founded in 1824, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute is America’s first technological research university. Rensselaer encompasses five schools, 32 research centers, more than 145 academic programs, and a dynamic community made up of more than 7,600 students and more than 100,000 living alumni. Rensselaer faculty and alumni include more than 145 National Academy members, six members of the National Inventors Hall of Fame, six National Medal of Technology winners, five National Medal of Science winners, and a Nobel Prize winner in Physics. With nearly 200 years of experience advancing scientific and technological knowledge, Rensselaer remains focused on addressing global challenges with a spirit of ingenuity and collaboration.
This feature originally appeared on rpi.edu.