Debdoot Ghosh · 2026-06-22
A plain-English AI summary of what this paper means for investors — generated on demand from the abstract.
Institutional rebalancing is a batched optimization workload with a hard operating deadline: hundreds of accounts need new weights under budget, turnover, exposure, exclusion, and tax-aware controls before trading can proceed. This paper evaluates Asymmetry PRISM, a CPU/GPU portfolio optimization engine, through a public evaluation boundary; problem data in, and returned weights, status codes, timings, memory class, external feasibility diagnostics, eligible objective comparisons, and audit records out. Within that boundary, the evaluation protocol fixes hardware and software versions, declares timing lanes, separates cold single calls from repeated workloads, and admits objective-gap claims only where an eligible reference solver completed. On completed multi-solver rows from N=100 to N=2,000, Asymmetry PRISM-CPU is 4.5x to 24.1x faster than the fastest completed reference row in the same lane. In the production queue study, Asymmetry PRISM-GPU completes 500/500 accounts over a 10,000-instrument universe in 109.5 s within a declared 25-minute operating window, with zero missed deadlines and an audit record for every solve; the recorded OSQP queue baseline completes 4/500. On an operationally constrained real-data suite (tax-motivated transition penalties, restriction caps, turnover controls, batches), Asymmetry PRISM clears constrained solves 3.4x to 126.7x faster than the best completing incumbent at certified-equal objectives, and the GPU route widens to 8.8x over the CPU route at N=384,800. Rows without a completed reference are reported as feasibility, timing, memory, and failure-status evidence.
Go deeper: a full research-committee breakdown of this paper, its assumptions and failure modes, and how its method would apply to a specific ticker or your watchlist. See StockTools AI →
AI summary generated from the paper’s public abstract via arXiv; it may miss nuance — read the source before relying on it. Thank you to arXiv for its open-access interoperability; StockTools is not affiliated with arXiv, and all rights remain with the authors. Educational only, not financial advice.