0000000001039028

AUTHOR

Fabrizio Lillo

showing 101 related works from this author

Applying complexity science to air traffic management

2015

Versión aceptada obtenida del archivo digital en línea WestminsterResearch de la Universidad de Westminster. Complexity science is the multidisciplinary study of complex systems. Its marked network orientation lends itself well to transport contexts. Key features of complexity science are introduced and defined, with a specific focus on the application to air traffic management. An overview of complex network theory is presented, with examples of its corresponding metrics and multiple scales. Complexity science is starting to make important contributions to performance assessment and system design: selected, applied air traffic management case studies are explored. The important contexts of…

EngineeringEmergent behaviourStrategy and ManagementComplex systemL-SpaceTransportationManagement Monitoring Policy and LawEmergent behaviorPerformance assessmentPerformance measurementResilience (network)Transportation NetworksResilienceManagement sciencebusiness.industryAir traffic managementComplex network theoryComplex networkAir traffic controlSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Complexity scienceUrban Rail TransitSystems designSocio-ecological systembusinessLaw
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Modeling foreign exchange market activity around macroeconomic news: Hawkes-process approach

2015

We present a Hawkes-model approach to the foreign exchange market in which the high-frequency price dynamics is affected by a self-exciting mechanism and an exogenous component, generated by the pre-announced arrival of macroeconomic news. By focusing on time windows around the news announcement, we find that the model is able to capture the increase of trading activity after the news, both when the news has a sizable effect on volatility and when this effect is negligible, either because the news in not important or because the announcement is in line with the forecast by analysts. We extend the model by considering noncausal effects, due to the fact that the existence of the news (but not…

news arrivalTime windowsforeign exchange marketHawkes processehigh frequency financeEconomicsMonetary economicsVolatility (finance)Time seriesForeign exchange marketComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS
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Multi-scale analysis of the European airspace using network community detection

2014

We show that the European airspace can be represented as a multi-scale traffic network whose nodes are airports, sectors, or navigation points and links are defined and weighted according to the traffic of flights between the nodes. By using a unique database of the air traffic in the European airspace, we investigate the architecture of these networks with a special emphasis on their community structure. We propose that unsupervised network community detection algorithms can be used to monitor the current use of the airspaces and improve it by guiding the design of new ones. Specifically, we compare the performance of three community detection algorithms, also by using a null model which t…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesDatabases FactualDistributed computingSocial SciencesPoison controllcsh:MedicineSociologycommunity detectionData Mininglcsh:SciencePhysicsMultidisciplinaryMathematical modelApplied MathematicsPhysicsCommunity structureComputer Science - Social and Information NetworksAir traffic controlAir TravelSocial NetworksPhysical SciencesInterdisciplinary PhysicsSocial SystemsEngineering and TechnologyFree flightInformation TechnologyNetwork AnalysisAlgorithmsResearch ArticlePhysics - Physics and SocietyComputer and Information SciencesControl (management)FOS: Physical sciencesComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMSPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Statistical MechanicsDatabasescomplex networkHumansArchitectureNetworks network communities socio-technical system complex systems Air Traffic ManagementSocial and Information Networks (cs.SI)Null modellcsh:RModels TheoreticalSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Computational SociologySignal ProcessingAir trafficlcsh:QMathematics
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Anomalous Spreading of Power-Law Quantum Wave Packets

1999

We introduce power-law tail quantum wave packets. We show that they can be seen as eigenfunctions of a Hamiltonian with a physical potential. We prove that the free evolution of these packets presents an asymptotic decay of the maximum of the wave packets which is anomalous for an interval of the characterizing power-law exponent. We also prove that the number of finite moments of the wave packets is a conserved quantity during the evolution of the wave packet in the free space.

PhysicsQuantum PhysicsStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Network packetWave packetFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyEigenfunctionPower lawConserved quantityComputer Science::Performancesymbols.namesakeQuantum mechanicsComputer Science::Networking and Internet ArchitecturesymbolsExponentQuantum Physics (quant-ph)Hamiltonian (quantum mechanics)QuantumCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsPhysical Review Letters
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Identification of clusters of investors from their real trading activity in a financial market

2012

We use statistically validated networks, a recently introduced method to validate links in a bipartite system, to identify clusters of investors trading in a financial market. Specifically, we investigate a special database allowing to track the trading activity of individual investors of the stock Nokia. We find that many statistically detected clusters of investors show a very high degree of synchronization in the time when they decide to trade and in the trading action taken. We investigate the composition of these clusters and we find that several of them show an over-expression of specific categories of investors.

Social and Information Networks (cs.SI)FOS: Computer and information sciencesPhysicsPhysics - Physics and SocietyQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureBipartite systemFinancial marketFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyNetworkComputer Science - Social and Information NetworksPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)tradingComplex networkBipartite systemTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businessIdentification (information)big dataSynchronization (computer science)EconometricsNetworks Bipartite systems Financial MarketsFinancial MarketsStock (geology)clustering
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Variety and volatility in financial markets

2000

We study the price dynamics of stocks traded in a financial market by considering the statistical properties both of a single time series and of an ensemble of stocks traded simultaneously. We use the $n$ stocks traded in the New York Stock Exchange to form a statistical ensemble of daily stock returns. For each trading day of our database, we study the ensemble return distribution. We find that a typical ensemble return distribution exists in most of the trading days with the exception of crash and rally days and of the days subsequent to these extreme events. We analyze each ensemble return distribution by extracting its first two central moments. We observe that these moments are fluctua…

Statistical ensembleStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Stochastic processFinancial marketQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesProbability density functionRelative strengthFOS: Economics and businessStock exchangeEconometricsVolatility (finance)Condensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsStock (geology)MathematicsPhysical review. E, Statistical physics, plasmas, fluids, and related interdisciplinary topics
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There's more to volatility than volume

2006

It is widely believed that fluctuations in transaction volume, as reflected in the number of transactions and to a lesser extent their size, are the main cause of clustered volatility. Under this view bursts of rapid or slow price diffusion reflect bursts of frequent or less frequent trading, which cause both clustered volatility and heavy tails in price returns. We investigate this hypothesis using tick by tick data from the New York and London Stock Exchanges and show that only a small fraction of volatility fluctuations are explained in this manner. Clustered volatility is still very strong even if price changes are recorded on intervals in which the total transaction volume or number of…

Physics - Physics and SocietyEconomicsvolatilityFOS: Physical sciencessubordinated processesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)FOS: Economics and businessStock exchangeddc:330EconometricsEconomicsVolatility Modelling; Transaction Frequency; Trading Volume; Market StructurevolumeStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Financial marketVolume (computing)WirtschaftQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinancePolitical EconomyVolkswirtschaftslehrefinancial marketVolatility (finance)Constant (mathematics)General Economics Econometrics and FinanceDatabase transactionFinance
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Do firms share the same functional form of their growth rate distribution? A statistical test

2014

We introduce a new statistical test of the hypothesis that a balanced panel of firms have the same growth rate distribution or, more generally, that they share the same functional form of growth rate distribution. We applied the test to European Union and US publicly quoted manufacturing firms data, considering functional forms belonging to the Subbotin family of distributions. While our hypotheses are rejected for the vast majority of sets at the sector level, we cannot rejected them at the subsector level, indicating that homogenous panels of firms could be described by a common functional form of growth rate distribution.

Economics and EconometricsControl and OptimizationFOS: Physical sciencesDistribution (economics)Heterogeneous firmEDF testsFOS: Economics and businessMicroeconomicsGrowth rate distribution of individual firmEconomicsmedia_common.cataloged_instanceEuropean unionScalingmedia_commonStatistical hypothesis testingSettore SECS-S/06 - Metodi mat. dell'economia e Scienze Attuariali e FinanziarieStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)EDF testbusiness.industryApplied MathematicsSettore FIS/01 - Fisica SperimentaleQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceProbability and statisticsVariance (accounting)Settore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)North American Industry Classification SystemHeterogeneous firmsPhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityNull hypothesisbusinessData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)
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Modelling systemic price cojumps with Hawkes factor models

2015

Instabilities in the price dynamics of a large number of financial assets are a clear sign of systemic events. By investigating a set of 20 high cap stocks traded at the Italian Stock Exchange, we find that there is a large number of high frequency cojumps. We show that the dynamics of these jumps is described neither by a multivariate Poisson nor by a multivariate Hawkes model. We introduce a Hawkes one factor model which is able to capture simultaneously the time clustering of jumps and the high synchronization of jumps across assets.

Multivariate statisticsEconomicsSystemic shockPoisson distribution01 natural sciencesSynchronizationEconometrics and Finance (all)2001 EconomicsFOS: Economics and business010104 statistics & probabilitysymbols.namesakeHigh frequency data0502 economics and businessEconomicsEconometricsCojumps0101 mathematicsCojumps; Hawkes processes; High frequency data; Systemic shocks; Finance; Economics Econometrics and Finance (all)2001 Economics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Time clusteringFactor analysisSettore SECS-S/06 - Metodi mat. dell'economia e Scienze Attuariali e FinanziarieStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)050208 financeSystemic shocksHawkes processe05 social sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceEconomics Econometrics and Finance (all)2001 Economics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)symbolsCojumpHawkes processesGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceSign (mathematics)Quantitative Finance
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How Tick Size Affects the High Frequency Scaling of Stock Return Distributions

2014

We study the high frequency scaling of the distributions of returns for stocks traded at NASDAQ market as a function of the tick-to-price ratio. The tick-to-price ratio is a measure of an effective tick size. We find dramatic differences between distributions for assets with large and small tick-to-price ratio. The presence of returns clustering is evident for large tick size assets. The statistical differences between large and small tick size assets appear to reduce at higher time scales of observation. A possible way to explain returns dynamics for large tick size assets is the coupling of returns with bid-ask spread dynamics. A simple Markov- switching model is able to reproduce the pro…

Tick sizeFinancial economicsReturns distributionMarkov-switching modelStock returnReturns clusteringScalingBid–ask spreadTick sizeEconometricsBid-ask spreadFrequency scalingScalingMathematics
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Inverted and mirror repeats in model nucleotide sequences.

2007

We analytically and numerically study the probabilistic properties of inverted and mirror repeats in model sequences of nucleic acids. We consider both perfect and non-perfect repeats, i.e. repeats with mismatches and gaps. The considered sequence models are independent identically distributed (i.i.d.) sequences, Markov processes and long range sequences. We show that the number of repeats in correlated sequences is significantly larger than in i.i.d. sequences and that this discrepancy increases exponentially with the repeat length for long range sequences.

Independent identically distributedTime FactorsMolecular Sequence DataMarkov processNucleic Acid DenaturationQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsCombinatoricssymbols.namesakeExponential growthChromosomes Human inverted repeatsNucleotideQuantitative Biology - GenomicsRNA Small InterferingQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)Sequence (medicine)MathematicsProbabilityRepetitive Sequences Nucleic AcidGenomics (q-bio.GN)chemistry.chemical_classificationStochastic ProcessesModels StatisticalBase SequenceNucleotidesProbabilistic logicMarkov ChainschemistryFOS: Biological sciencesNucleic acidsymbolsNucleic Acid RenaturationNucleic Acid ConformationAlgorithmsPhysical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics
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Scale-free relaxation of a wave packet in a quantum well with power-law tails

2013

We propose a setup for which a power-law decay is predicted to be observable for generic and realistic conditions. The system we study is very simple: A quantum wave packet initially prepared in a potential well with (i) tails asymptotically decaying like ~ x^{-2} and (ii) an eigenvalues spectrum that shows a continuous part attached to the ground or equilibrium state. We analytically derive the asymptotic decay law from the spectral properties for generic, confined initial states. Our findings are supported by realistic numerical simulations for state-of-the-art expansion experiments with cold atoms.

PhysicsQuantum PhysicsStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Thermodynamic equilibriumWave packetFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and AstronomyObservableQuantum mechanicPower lawSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)03.65.Ge Solutions of wave equations: bound states 02.60.Cb Numerical simulationtunnelingpower law distributionRelaxation (physics)Statistical physicssolution of equations 03.65.Xp Tunneling traversal time quantum Zeno dynamics 02.10.Ud Linear algebra03.65.Fd Algebraic methodsQuantum Physics (quant-ph)QuantumCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsEigenvalues and eigenvectorsQuantum well
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A theory for long-memory in supply and demand

2004

Recent empirical studies have demonstrated long-memory in the signs of orders to buy or sell in financial markets [2, 19]. We show how this can be caused by delays in market clearing. Under the common practice of order splitting, large orders are broken up into pieces and executed incrementally. If the size of such large orders is power law distributed, this gives rise to power law decaying autocorrelations in the signs of executed orders. More specifically, we show that if the cumulative distribution of large orders of volume v is proportional to v to the power -alpha and the size of executed orders is constant, the autocorrelation of order signs as a function of the lag tau is asymptotica…

PhysicsPhysics - Physics and SocietyActuarial scienceQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureCumulative distribution functionAutocorrelationFOS: Physical sciencesOrder (ring theory)Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Function (mathematics)Trading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businessCombinatoricsCondensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterExecution Commerce optimal liquidationLong memoryDiffusion (business)Constant (mathematics)Other Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)
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Univariate and multivariate statistical aspects of equity volatility

2004

We discuss univariate and multivariate statistical properties of volatility time series of equities traded in a financial market. Specifically, (i) we introduce a two-region stochastic volatility model able to well describe the unconditional pdf of volatility in a wide range of values and (ii) we quantify the stability of the results of a correlation-based clustering procedure applied to synchronous time evolution of a set of volatility time series.

Stochastic volatilityFinancial models with long-tailed distributions and volatility clusteringVolatility smileUnivariateEconometricsForward volatilityEconomicsVolatility (finance)Implied volatilitySettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)volatility financial markets econophysics log range correlated processes stochastic processesHeston model
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Statistically validated networks in bipartite complex systems.

2011

Many complex systems present an intrinsic bipartite nature and are often described and modeled in terms of networks [1-5]. Examples include movies and actors [1, 2, 4], authors and scientific papers [6-9], email accounts and emails [10], plants and animals that pollinate them [11, 12]. Bipartite networks are often very heterogeneous in the number of relationships that the elements of one set establish with the elements of the other set. When one constructs a projected network with nodes from only one set, the system heterogeneity makes it very difficult to identify preferential links between the elements. Here we introduce an unsupervised method to statistically validate each link of the pr…

Theoretical computer scienceComputer sciencelcsh:MedicineNetwork theorySocial and Behavioral SciencesBioinformaticsQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsSociologyProtein Interaction Mappinglcsh:ScienceQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)MultidisciplinarySystems BiologyApplied MathematicsPhysicsStatisticsComplex SystemsGenomicsLink (geometry)Social NetworksSpecialization (logic)Interdisciplinary PhysicsBipartite graphProbability distributionResearch ArticleNetwork analysisPhysics - Physics and SocietyComplex systemFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Type (model theory)BiologyModels BiologicalNetwork theory Statistical PhysicsStatistical MechanicsSet (abstract data type)Statistical MethodsBiologyStructure (mathematical logic)Statistical Physicslcsh:RComputational BiologyModels TheoreticalComparative GenomicsSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)FOS: Biological sciencesNetwork theorylcsh:QNull hypothesisMathematicsPLoS ONE
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Why Is Equity Order Flow so Persistent?

2014

Order flow in equity markets is remarkably persistent in the sense that order signs (to buy or sell) are positively autocorrelated out to time lags of tens of thousands of orders, corresponding to many days. Two possible explanations are herding, corresponding to positive correlation in the behavior of different investors, or order splitting, corresponding to positive autocorrelation in the behavior of single investors. We investigate this using order flow data from the London Stock Exchange for which we have membership identifiers. By formulating models for herding and order splitting, as well as models for brokerage choice, we are able to overcome the distortion introduced by brokerage. O…

Flow (mathematics)Order (exchange)Stock exchangeAutocorrelationEconometricsEconomicsEquity (finance)HerdingMarket microstructureBehavioral economicsSSRN Electronic Journal
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Statistical properties of thermodynamically predicted RNA secondary structures in viral genomes

2008

By performing a comprehensive study on 1832 segments of 1212 complete genomes of viruses, we show that in viral genomes the hairpin structures of thermodynamically predicted RNA secondary structures are more abundant than expected under a simple random null hypothesis. The detected hairpin structures of RNA secondary structures are present both in coding and in noncoding regions for the four groups of viruses categorized as dsDNA, dsRNA, ssDNA and ssRNA. For all groups hairpin structures of RNA secondary structures are detected more frequently than expected for a random null hypothesis in noncoding rather than in coding regions. However, potential RNA secondary structures are also present i…

Genomics (q-bio.GN)inverted repeatbioinformaticRNAstatistical physicsComputational biologyBiologyCondensed Matter PhysicsGenomeQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsRNA silencingViral genomesFOS: Biological sciencesCoding regionQuantitative Biology - GenomicsQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)
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Kullback-Leibler distance as a measure of the information filtered from multivariate data

2007

We show that the Kullback-Leibler distance is a good measure of the statistical uncertainty of correlation matrices estimated by using a finite set of data. For correlation matrices of multivariate Gaussian variables we analytically determine the expected values of the Kullback-Leibler distance of a sample correlation matrix from a reference model and we show that the expected values are known also when the specific model is unknown. We propose to make use of the Kullback-Leibler distance to estimate the information extracted from a correlation matrix by correlation filtering procedures. We also show how to use this distance to measure the stability of filtering procedures with respect to s…

Physics - Physics and SocietyKullback–Leibler divergenceStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Covariance matrixEXPRESSION DATAFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceMultivariate normal distributionPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Measure (mathematics)Stability (probability)Hierarchical clusteringDistance correlationFOS: Economics and businessPhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityStatisticsTime seriesAlgorithmData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)MATRICESMathematics
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Modeling the Dynamics of a Financial Index after a Crash

2004

Supply and demand are perhaps the most fundamental concepts in economics. In a financial market they reflects the orders of the agents to buy or sell a given asset. In turn the fluctuations of supply and demand influence the dynamics of the price of an asset, as, for example, a stock or a financial index. Therefore the dynamics of the price of an asset is affected by the actions and of the beliefs of the agents. It is known that the dynamics of the price of an asset is far from simple, Several stylized facts has been empirically discovered such as, for example, the fat tails in the return distribution and the clustered volatility. These stylized facts has been detected by considering long t…

FinanceStatistical regularityStylized factFinancial economicsbusiness.industryFinancial marketEconomicsImplied volatilityVolatility (finance)businessStock (geology)Statistical hypothesis testingSupply and demand
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The limit order book on different time scales

2007

Financial markets can be described on several time scales. We use data from the limit order book of the London Stock Exchange (LSE) to compare how the fluctuation dominated microstructure crosses over to a more systematic global behavior.

FOS: Economics and businessPhysics - Physics and SocietyQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureStock exchangePhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityFinancial marketEconomicsEconometricsFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Data Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)Trading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)
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Modeling the coupled return-spread high frequency dynamics of large tick assets

2015

Large tick assets, i.e. assets where one tick movement is a significant fraction of the price and bid-ask spread is almost always equal to one tick, display a dynamics in which price changes and spread are strongly coupled. We introduce a Markov-switching modeling approach for price change, where the latent Markov process is the transition between spreads. We then use a finite Markov mixture of logit regressions on past squared returns to describe the dependence of the probability of price changes. The model can thus be seen as a Double Chain Markov Model. We show that the model describes the shape of return distribution at different time aggregations, volatility clustering, and the anomalo…

Statistics and ProbabilityComputer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryVolatility clusteringQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureMarkov chainLogitMarkov processStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsMarkov modelmodels of financial markets nonlinear dynamics stochastic processesTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businesssymbols.namesakesymbolsEconometricsKurtosisFraction (mathematics)Almost surelyStatistics Probability and Uncertainty60J20Mathematics
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Statistical identification with hidden Markov models of large order splitting strategies in an equity market

2010

Large trades in a financial market are usually split into smaller parts and traded incrementally over extended periods of time. We address these large trades as hidden orders. In order to identify and characterize hidden orders we fit hidden Markov models to the time series of the sign of the tick by tick inventory variation of market members of the Spanish Stock Exchange. Our methodology probabilistically detects trading sequences, which are characterized by a net majority of buy or sell transactions. We interpret these patches of sequential buying or selling transactions as proxies of the traded hidden orders. We find that the time, volume and number of transactions size distributions of …

Quantitative Finance - Trading and Market Microstructuremedia_common.quotation_subjectFinancial marketEquity (finance)General Physics and AstronomyMarket trendAsymmetryTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businessStock exchangeEconometricsEconophysics Financial markets Hidden Markov ModelsSegmentationHidden Markov modelmedia_commonMathematics
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Market efficiency and the long-memory of supply and demand: is price impact variable and permanent or fixed and temporary?

2016

In this comment we discuss the problem of reconciling the linear efficiency of price returns with the long-memory of supply and demand. We present new evidence that shows that efficiency is maintained by a liquidity imbalance that co-moves with the imbalance of buyer vs. seller initiated transactions. For example, during a period where there is an excess of buyer initiated transactions, there is also more liquidity for buy orders than sell orders, so that buy orders generate smaller and less frequent price responses than sell orders. At the moment a buy order is placed the transaction sign imbalance tends to dominate, generating a price impact. However, the liquidity imbalance rapidly incre…

SupplyPhysics - Physics and SocietyQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureSupply shockMarket demand scheduleMarket clearingCommerceFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Trading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)Excess supplySupply and demandFOS: Economics and businessMicroeconomicsExecutionDemand curveEconomicsoptimal liquidationGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceAggregate demand
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Statistical characterization of deviations from planned flight trajectories in air traffic management

2016

Understanding the relation between planned and realized flight trajectories and the determinants of flight deviations is of great importance in air traffic management. In this paper we perform an in depth investigation of the statistical properties of planned and realized air traffic on the German airspace during a 28 day periods, corresponding to an AIRAC cycle. We find that realized trajectories are on average shorter than planned ones and this effect is stronger during night-time than daytime. Flights are more frequently deviated close to the departure airport and at a relatively large angle to destination. Moreover, the probability of a deviation is higher in low traffic phases. All the…

0301 basic medicinePhysics - Physics and SocietyEngineeringStrategy and ManagementFOS: Physical sciencesTransportationPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Management Monitoring Policy and LawStability (probability)socio-technical complex systemAviation safety03 medical and health sciencesControl theory0502 economics and business11. SustainabilityAir traffic management complex networks trajectoriesSimulationRandomness050210 logistics & transportationbusiness.industry05 social sciencesAir traffic managementAir traffic controlSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)030104 developmental biologyMetric (mathematics)TrajectoryNull hypothesisbusinessLawair traffc managementJournal of Air Transport Management
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Specialization and herding behavior of trading firms in a financial market

2008

Agent-based models of financial markets usually make assumptions about agent’s preferred stylized strategies. Empirical validations of these assumptions have not been performed so far on a full-market scale. Here we present a comprehensive study of the resulting strategies followed by the firms which are members of the Spanish Stock Exchange. We are able to show that they can be characterized by a resulting strategy and classified in three well- defined groups of firms. Firms of the first group have a change of inventory of the traded stock which is positively correlated with the synchronous stock return whereas firms of the second group show a negative correlation. Firms of the third group…

PhysicsStylized factSTOCK-MARKETFinancial marketTIME-SERIESTRADESGeneral Physics and AstronomyUncorrelatedMODELINVESTORSRATIONALITYPRICESGranger causalityStock exchangeEconometricsHerdingHerd behaviorStock (geology)New Journal of Physics
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Degree stability of a minimum spanning tree of price return and volatility

2002

We investigate the time series of the degree of minimum spanning trees obtained by using a correlation based clustering procedure which is starting from (i) asset return and (ii) volatility time series. The minimum spanning tree is obtained at different times by computing correlation among time series over a time window of fixed length $T$. We find that the minimum spanning tree of asset return is characterized by stock degree values, which are more stable in time than the ones obtained by analyzing a minimum spanning tree computed starting from volatility time series. Our analysis also shows that the degree of stocks has a very slow dynamics with a time-scale of several years in both cases.

Statistics and ProbabilityPhysics - Physics and SocietyFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Minimum spanning treeFOS: Economics and businessTime windowsStatisticsMathematical PhysicCluster analysisStock (geology)Condensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematicsSpanning treeStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)EconophysicQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsAsset returnCondensed Matter PhysicsSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)VolatilityCorrelation-based clusteringPrice returnVolatility (finance)
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THE KEY ROLE OF LIQUIDITY FLUCTUATIONS IN DETERMINING LARGE PRICE CHANGES

2005

Recent empirical analyses have shown that liquidity fluctuations are important for understanding large price changes of financial assets. These liquidity fluctuations are quantified by gaps in the order book, corresponding to blocks of adjacent price levels containing no quotes. Here we study the statistical properties of the state of the limit order book for 16 stocks traded at the London Stock Exchange (LSE). We show that the time series of the first three gaps are characterized by fat tails in the probability distribution and are described by long memory processes.

Stock exchangeGeneral MathematicsFinancial marketEconometricsOrder bookKey (cryptography)EconomicsGeneral Physics and AstronomyProbability distributionLiquidity crisisPrice levelMarket liquidityFluctuation and Noise Letters
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On the origin of power law tails in price fluctuations

2003

In a recent Nature paper, Gabaix et al. \cite{Gabaix03} presented a theory to explain the power law tail of price fluctuations. The main points of their theory are that volume fluctuations, which have a power law tail with exponent roughly -1.5, are modulated by the average market impact function, which describes the response of prices to transactions. They argue that the average market impact function follows a square root law, which gives power law tails for prices with exponent roughly -3. We demonstrate that the long-memory nature of order flow invalidates their statistical analysis of market impact, and present a more careful analysis that properly takes this into account. This makes i…

FOS: Economics and businessStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Financial economicsMathematical financeEconomicsQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinancePower lawFinance Commerce correlation matrixFinanceCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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THE ROLE OF UNBOUNDED TIME-SCALES IN GENERATING LONG-RANGE MEMORY IN ADDITIVE MARKOVIAN PROCESSES

2013

Any additive stationary and continuous Markovian process described by a Fokker–Planck equation can also be described in terms of a Schrödinger equation with an appropriate quantum potential. By using such analogy, it has been proved that a power-law correlated stationary Markovian process can stem from a quantum potential that (i) shows an x-2 decay for large x values and (ii) whose eigenvalue spectrum admits a null eigenvalue and a continuum part of positive eigenvalues attached to it. In this paper we show that such two features are both necessary. Specifically, we show that a potential with tails decaying like x-μ with μ < 2 gives rise to a stationary Markovian process which is not p…

Stochastic processGeneral MathematicsAutocorrelationNull (mathematics)Mathematical analysisSpectrum (functional analysis)Quantum potentialstochastic processes survival probabilityGeneral Physics and AstronomyMarkov processStochastic processeSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Schrödinger equationsymbols.namesakelong range correlationsymbolsEigenvalues and eigenvectorsMathematicsFluctuation and Noise Letters
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Price Impact Function of a Single Transaction

2004

Although supply and demand are perhaps the most fundamental concepts in economics, finding any general form for their behavior has proved to be elusive. Here we discuss our recent findings [1] on the price impact function empirically detected in the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Our study builds on earlier studies of how trading affects prices [2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11]. In particular, we look at the short term response to a single trade. This is done by using huge amounts of data and by measuring the market activity in units of transactions rather than seconds, so that we can more naturally aggregate data for many different stocks. This allows us to find regularities in the respons…

Reservation priceOrder (exchange)Stock exchangeFinancial economicsMid priceEconometricsEconomicsOrder bookAggregate dataDatabase transactionSupply and demand
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Hierarchically nested factor model from multivariate data

2005

We show how to achieve a statistical description of the hierarchical structure of a multivariate data set. Specifically we show that the similarity matrix resulting from a hierarchical clustering procedure is the correlation matrix of a factor model, the hierarchically nested factor model. In this model, factors are mutually independent and hierarchically organized. Finally, we use a bootstrap based procedure to reduce the number of factors in the model with the aim of retaining only those factors significantly robust with respect to the statistical uncertainty due to the finite length of data records.

Data recordsStructure (mathematical logic)Multivariate statisticsCovariance matrixFinance commerce hierarchical structureGeneral Physics and AstronomySimilarity matrixFOS: Physical sciencesDisordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn)Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural Networkscomputer.software_genreHierarchical clusteringCondensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterSet (abstract data type)Factor (programming language)Data miningcomputerMathematicscomputer.programming_languageOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)
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Inverted Repeats in Viral Genomes

2004

We investigate 738 complete genomes of viruses to detect the presence of short inverted repeats. The number of inverted repeats found is compared with the prediction obtained for a Bernoullian and for a Markovian control model. We find as a statistical regularity that the number of observed inverted repeats is often greater than the one expected in terms of a Bernoullian or Markovian model in several of the viruses and in almost all those with a genome longer than 30,000 bp.

Genomics (q-bio.GN)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Complex systemInverted repeatGeneral Mathematicsviral genomeGeneral Physics and AstronomyFOS: Physical sciencesComputational biologyBiologyGenomeQuantitative Biology - Quantitative MethodsSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)stochastic processeViral genomesFOS: Biological sciencessecondary RNA struc- tureQuantitative Biology - GenomicsQuantitative Methods (q-bio.QM)Condensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsDNA probabilistic models
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Statistical Properties of Statistical Ensembles of Stock Returns

1999

We select n stocks traded in the New York Stock Exchange and we form a statistical ensemble of daily stock returns for each of the k trading days of our database from the stock price time series. We analyze each ensemble of stock returns by extracting its first four central moments. We observe that these moments are fluctuating in time and are stochastic processes themselves. We characterize the statistical properties of central moments by investigating their probability density function and temporal correlation properties.

Statistical ensemblePhysics::Physics and SocietyStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Stochastic processFinancial economicsQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesProbability density functionTemporal correlationStock priceFOS: Economics and businessStock exchangeComputer Science::Computational Engineering Finance and ScienceEconomicsEconometricsGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceStock (geology)Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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Special issue of Quantitative Finance on ‘Interlinkages and Systemic Risk’

2015

This special issue of Quantitative Finance collects eight papers on the relation between interlinkages and systemic risk. The papers cover several types of interlinkages and follow different approaches, from agent-based modelling to empirical investigation of large and sometimes confidential data. The special issue collects some of the contributions presented at the international workshop‘Interlinkages and systemic risk ’ , which took place in Ancona (Italy) on 4 – 5 July 2013. The workshop, organized within the research project‘. New tools in the credit network modeling with agents ’ heterogeneity ’ funded by the Institute for New Economic Thinking, was attended by a balanced mix of schola…

Economics Econometrics and Finance (all)2001 Economics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Actuarial scienceFinancial economicsMathematical financeSystemic riskEconomicsAssenteGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinance
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Market Impact and Trading Profile of Hidden Orders in Stock Markets

2009

We empirically study the market impact of trading orders. We are specifically interested in large trading orders that are executed incrementally, which we call hidden orders. These are statistically reconstructed based on information about market member codes using data from the Spanish Stock Market and the London Stock Exchange. We find that market impact is strongly concave, approximately increasing as the square root of order size. Furthermore, as a given order is executed, the impact grows in time according to a power law; after the order is finished, it reverts to a level of about 0.5-0.7 of its value at its peak. We observe that hidden orders are executed at a rate that more or less m…

Financial ManagementFluids & PlasmasFinancial markets econophysics hidden orderscomputer.software_genre01 natural sciencesRisk-TakingStock exchangeLondon0502 economics and business0103 physical sciencesEconometricsEconomicsHumansInvestmentsAlgorithmic trading010306 general physicsStock (geology)Models Statistical050208 financeEconophysics05 social sciencesFinancial marketReproducibility of ResultsFlash tradingSpain8. Economic growthStock marketMarket impactcomputerAlgorithms
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The non-random walk of stock prices: The long-term correlation between signs and sizes

2007

We investigate the random walk of prices by developing a simple model relating the properties of the signs and absolute values of individual price changes to the diffusion rate (volatility) of prices at longer time scales. We show that this benchmark model is unable to reproduce the diffusion properties of real prices. Specifically, we find that for one hour intervals this model consistently over-predicts the volatility of real price series by about 70%, and that this effect becomes stronger as the length of the intervals increases. By selectively shuffling some components of the data while preserving others we are able to show that this discrepancy is caused by a subtle but long-range non-…

Physics - Physics and Societybusiness and managementFOS: Physical sciencesEconomicPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasCorrelationFOS: Economics and businessStochastic processes0103 physical sciencesEconometricsfinancial market010306 general physicsStock (geology)MathematicsStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)ShufflingMarket efficiencyQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceCondensed Matter PhysicsRandom walkElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsVolatility (finance)Brownian motioneconophysicLong term correlation
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Master curve for price-impact function

2003

The price reaction to a single transaction depends on transaction volume, the identity of the stock, and possibly many other factors. Here we show that, by taking into account the differences in liquidity for stocks of different size classes of market capitalization, we can rescale both the average price shift and the transaction volume to obtain a uniform price-impact curve for all size classes of firm for four different years (1995–98). This single-curve collapse of the price-impact function suggests that fluctuations from the supply-and-demand equilibrium for many financial assets, differing in economic sectors of activity and market capitalization, are governed by the same statistical r…

Price reactionMarket capitalizationMultidisciplinaryEconophysicsEconomic sectorAverage priceEconometricsEconomicsDatabase transactionStock (geology)Market liquidityNature
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Community characterization of heterogeneous complex systems

2011

We introduce an analytical statistical method to characterize the communities detected in heterogeneous complex systems. By posing a suitable null hypothesis, our method makes use of the hypergeometric distribution to assess the probability that a given property is over-expressed in the elements of a community with respect to all the elements of the investigated set. We apply our method to two specific complex networks, namely a network of world movies and a network of physics preprints. The characterization of the elements and of the communities is done in terms of languages and countries for the movie network and of journals and subject categories for papers. We find that our method is ab…

FOS: Computer and information sciencesStatistics and Probabilityrandom graphs networks statistical inference socio-economic networksPhysics - Physics and SocietyTheoretical computer scienceProperty (programming)Complex systemFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)socio-economic networksStatistical inferenceSocial and Information Networks (cs.SI)Random graphComputer Science - Social and Information NetworksStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsProbability and statisticsComplex networkSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Hypergeometric distributionPhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilitynetworkStatistics Probability and UncertaintyNull hypothesisData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)random graphstatistical inferenceJournal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment
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Diffusive behavior and the modeling of characteristic times in limit order executions

2007

We present an empirical study of the first passage time (FPT) of order book prices needed to observe a prescribed price change Delta, the time to fill (TTF) for executed limit orders and the time to cancel (TTC) for canceled ones in a double auction market. We find that the distribution of all three quantities decays asymptotically as a power law, but that of FPT has significantly fatter tails than that of TTF. Thus a simple first passage time model cannot account for the observed TTF of limit orders. We propose that the origin of this difference is the presence of cancellations. We outline a simple model, which assumes that prices are characterized by the empirically observed distribution …

Physics - Physics and SocietyFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Power lawFOS: Economics and businessOrder bookTime to fillLimit (mathematics)Statistical physicsMicrostructureMathematicsQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureEconophysicsLimit order marketEconophysicProbability and statisticsFirst passage timeTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)Distribution (mathematics)Physics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityExponentCensored dataFirst-hitting-time modelGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)
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Correlation based hierarchical clustering in financial time series

2005

We review a correlation based clustering procedure applied to a portfolio of assets synchronously traded in a financial market. The portfolio considered consists of the set of 500 highly capitalized stocks traded at the New York Stock Exchange during the time period 1987-1998. We show that meaningful economic information can be extracted from correlation matrices.

Set (abstract data type)FinanceCorrelationEconomic informationSeries (mathematics)Stock exchangebusiness.industryPortfoliobusinessCluster analysiseconophysichierarchical clusteringHierarchical clustering
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Limit order placement as an utility maximization problem and the origin of power law distribution of limit order prices

2006

I consider the problem of the optimal limit order price of a financial asset in the framework of the maximization of the utility function of the investor. The analytical solution of the problem gives insight on the origin of the recently empirically observed power law distribution of limit order prices. In the framework of the model, the most likely proximate cause of this power law is a power law heterogeneity of traders' investment time horizons .

Physics - Physics and SocietyQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureFinancial assetFOS: Physical sciencesFunction (mathematics)MaximizationPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Condensed Matter PhysicsInvestment (macroeconomics)Power lawElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businesssymbols.namesakeProximate and ultimate causationUtility maximization problemsymbolsEconometricsEconomicsPareto distributioneconophysics financial markets business and management
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The impact of systemic and illiquidity risk on financing with risky collateral

2015

Abstract Repurchase agreements (repos) are one of the most important sources of funding liquidity for many financial investors and intermediaries. In a repo, some assets are given by a borrower as collateral in exchange of funding. The capital given to the borrower is the market value of the collateral, reduced by an amount termed as haircut (or margin). The haircut protects the capital lender from loss of value of the collateral contingent on the borrower׳s default. For this reason, the haircut is typically calculated with a simple Value at Risk estimation of the collateral for the purpose of preventing the risk associated to volatility. However, other risk factors should be included in th…

FinanceEconomics and EconometricsSettore SECS-S/06 - Metodi mat. dell'economia e Scienze Attuariali e FinanziarieControl and OptimizationHaircutHaircutRepoCollateralbusiness.industryApplied MathematicsIlliquidityFinancial systemLiquidationRepurchase agreementLiquidity riskPortfolio overlapMargin (finance)Funding liquiditySystemic riskEconomicsSystemic riskDefaultSystemic risk; Illiquidity; Portfolio overlap; Repo; Haircut; LiquidationbusinessValue at risk
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Identification of Clusters of Investors from Their Real Trading Activity in a Financial Market

2011

We use statistically validated networks, a recently introduced method to validate links in a bipartite system, to identify clusters of investors trading in a financial market. Specifically, we investigate a special database allowing to track the trading activity of individual investors of the stock Nokia. We find that many statistically detected clusters of investors show a very high degree of synchronization in the time when they decide to trade and in the trading action taken. We investigate the composition of these clusters and we find that several of them show an over-expression of specific categories of investors.

Third marketBipartite systemFinancial marketEconometricsFinancial systemMarket microstructureBusinessSecondary marketAlgorithmic tradingcomputer.software_genrecomputerStock (geology)SSRN Electronic Journal
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Complex Networks in Air Transport

2016

The application of CNT to air traffic management has seen significant growth in recent years. This is partly because air traffic can be seen as the superposition of different networks, including the networks of airports, sectors and navigation points. Moreover each of these networks can be seen as a multiplex – for example, by associating each layer with a different airline. The study of the topology of these networks is important for several reasons related to understanding, monitoring, controlling, and optimising the air traffic system. The topological properties of air traffic networks are useful: (i) for studying how the air traffic has changed in recent years; (ii) for identifying the …

Air transportGeographybusiness.industrySystems engineeringcomplex networks air traffic management transportationArtificial intelligenceComplex networkbusinessSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)
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Dynamics of the Number of Trades of Financial Securities

1999

We perform a parallel analysis of the spectral density of (i) the logarithm of price and (ii) the daily number of trades of a set of stocks traded in the New York Stock Exchange. The stocks are selected to be representative of a wide range of stock capitalization. The observed spectral densities show a different power-law behavior. We confirm the $1/f^2$ behavior for the spectral density of the logarithm of stock price whereas we detect a $1/f$-like behavior for the spectral density of the daily number of trades.

Statistics and ProbabilityPhysics::Physics and SocietyStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)LogarithmStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Spectral densityFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceCondensed Matter PhysicsStock priceFOS: Economics and businessStock exchangeComputer Science::Computational Engineering Finance and ScienceEconometricsStock (geology)Condensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematics
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Variety of Stock Returns in Normal and Extreme Market Days: The August 1998 Crisis

2002

We investigate the recently introduced variety of a set of stock returns traded in a financial market. This investigation is done by considering daily and intraday time horizons in a 15-day time period centered at the August 31st, 1998 crash of the S&P500 index. All the stocks traded at the NYSE during that period are considered in the present analysis. We show that the statistical properties of the variety observed in analyses of daily returns also hold for intraday returns. In particular the largest changes of the variety of the return distribution turns out to be most localized at the opening or (to a less degree) at the closing of the market.

Return distributionActuarial scienceFinancial marketEconometricsEconomicsPrice returnTime horizonStock returnStock (geology)
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How markets slowly digest changes in supply and demand

2008

In this article we revisit the classic problem of tatonnement in price formation from a microstructure point of view, reviewing a recent body of theoretical and empirical work explaining how fluctuations in supply and demand are slowly incorporated into prices. Because revealed market liquidity is extremely low, large orders to buy or sell can only be traded incrementally, over periods of time as long as months. As a result order flow is a highly persistent long-memory process. Maintaining compatibility with market efficiency has profound consequences on price formation, on the dynamics of liquidity, and on the nature of impact. We review a body of theory that makes detailed quantitative pr…

Factor marketPhysics - Physics and Society050208 financeMarket rateQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Market clearing05 social sciencesFinancial marketFOS: Physical sciencesMarket microstructurePhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Supply and demandMarket liquidityTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)MicroeconomicsFOS: Economics and businessFinancial Markets Econophysics Microstructure Stochastic processes0502 economics and businessEconomics050207 economicsMarket impactCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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Cluster analysis for portfolio optimization

2005

We consider the problem of the statistical uncertainty of the correlation matrix in the optimization of a financial portfolio. We show that the use of clustering algorithms can improve the reliability of the portfolio in terms of the ratio between predicted and realized risk. Bootstrap analysis indicates that this improvement is obtained in a wide range of the parameters N (number of assets) and T (investment horizon). The predicted and realized risk level and the relative portfolio composition of the selected portfolio for a given value of the portfolio return are also investigated for each considered filtering method.

Physics - Physics and SocietyEconomics and EconometricsControl and OptimizationMathematics::Optimization and ControlFOS: Physical sciencesStatistics::Other StatisticsPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)random matrix theoryportfolio optimizationcorrelation matriceRate of return on a portfolioFOS: Economics and businessComputer Science::Computational Engineering Finance and ScienceEconometricsEconomicsCluster analysisModern portfolio theoryStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Covariance matrixApplied MathematicsQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceCondensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterPortfolioPortfolio optimizationVolatility (finance)clustering methodRandom matrixOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)
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Networks of equities in financial markets

2004

We review the recent approach of correlation based networks of financial equities. We investigate portfolio of stocks at different time horizons, financial indices and volatility time series and we show that meaningful economic information can be extracted from noise dressed correlation matrices. We show that the method can be used to falsify widespread market models by directly comparing the topological properties of networks of real and artificial markets.

Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Financial marketINDEXESFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceCondensed Matter PhysicsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsSettore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica Modelli e Metodi MatematiciFOS: Economics and businessEconomic informationDYNAMIC ASSET TREESEconometricsEconomicsPortfolioVolatility (finance)INTERNETVOLATILITYCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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Calibration of optimal execution of financial transactions in the presence of transient market impact

2012

Trading large volumes of a financial asset in order driven markets requires the use of algorithmic execution dividing the volume in many transactions in order to minimize costs due to market impact. A proper design of an optimal execution strategy strongly depends on a careful modeling of market impact, i.e. how the price reacts to trades. In this paper we consider a recently introduced market impact model (Bouchaud et al., 2004), which has the property of describing both the volume and the temporal dependence of price change due to trading. We show how this model can be used to describe price impact also in aggregated trade time or in real time. We then solve analytically and calibrate wit…

Statistics and ProbabilityMathematical optimizationQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Financial market Econophysics stochastic processesFinancial assetComputer scienceVolume (computing)Efficient frontierQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsRisk neutralTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)FOS: Economics and businessOrder (exchange)Financial transactionfinancial instruments and regulation models of financial markets risk measure and managementTransient (computer programming)Statistics Probability and UncertaintyMarket impact
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Why is equity order flow so persistent?

2015

Abstract Order flow in equity markets is remarkably persistent in the sense that order signs (to buy or sell) are positively autocorrelated out to time lags of tens of thousands of orders, corresponding to many days. Two possible explanations are herding, corresponding to positive correlation in the behavior of different investors, or order splitting, corresponding to positive autocorrelation in the behavior of single investors. We investigate this using order flow data from the London Stock Exchange for which we have membership identifiers. By formulating models for herding and order splitting, as well as models for brokerage choice, we are able to overcome the distortion introduced by bro…

Economics and EconometricsControl and OptimizationMarket microstructureApplied MathematicsPrice impactAutocorrelationEquity (finance)Market microstructureHerdingBehavioral economicsPositive correlationOrder flowMicroeconomicsOrder splittingStock exchangeBehavioral financeEconomicsEconometricsHerding
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Spectral properties of correlation matrices for some hierarchically nested factor models

2007

We show that spectral methods, such as Principal Component Analysis and Random Matrix Theory, are unable to reveal the hierarchical (or nested) structure of a set of mutivariate data. We consider the method introduced in M. Tumminello et al., EPL 78, 30006 (2007) to associate a hierarchical factor model with a set of data by making use of clustering algorithms. This is done by proving the existence of a bijective correspondence between a hierarchical tree and a factor model.

Set (abstract data type)Discrete mathematicsTree (data structure)Multiple correspondence analysisPrincipal component analysisBijectionCluster analysisRandom matrixFactor analysisMathematics
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When do improved covariance matrix estimators enhance portfolio optimization? An empirical comparative study of nine estimators

2011

The use of improved covariance matrix estimators as an alternative to the sample estimator is considered an important approach for enhancing portfolio optimization. Here we empirically compare the performance of 9 improved covariance estimation procedures by using daily returns of 90 highly capitalized US stocks for the period 1997-2007. We find that the usefulness of covariance matrix estimators strongly depends on the ratio between estimation period T and number of stocks N, on the presence or absence of short selling, and on the performance metric considered. When short selling is allowed, several estimation methods achieve a realized risk that is significantly smaller than the one obtai…

Physics - Physics and SocietyCovariance matrixPortfolio optimizationEconophysicsDiversification (finance)EstimatorFOS: Physical sciencesSample (statistics)Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph)FOS: Economics and businessEstimation of covariance matricesPortfolio Management (q-fin.PM)Risk Management (q-fin.RM)StatisticsPortfolioFraction (mathematics)Correlation structurePortfolio optimizationGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceStatistical methodQuantitative Finance - Portfolio ManagementMathematicsQuantitative Finance - Risk Management
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Economic Sector Identification in a Set of Stocks Traded at the New York Stock Exchange: A Comparative Analysis

2006

We review some methods recently used in the literature to detect the existence of a certain degree of common behavior of stock returns belonging to the same economic sector. Specifically, we discuss methods based on random matrix theory and hierarchical clustering techniques. We apply these methods to a set of stocks traded at the New York Stock Exchange. The investigated time series are recorded at a daily time horizon. All the considered methods are able to detect economic information and the presence of clusters characterized by the economic sector of stocks. However, different methodologies provide different information about the considered set. Our comparative analysis suggests that th…

Physics - Physics and SocietyStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Correlation coefficientEconomic sectorEconophysicsFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceTime horizonPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)minimum spanning treeSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Hierarchical clusteringFOS: Economics and businessEconomic informationStock exchangePhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityEconomicsEconometricsfinancial marketRandom matrixData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)Stock (geology)
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Trading activity and price impact in parallel markets: SETS vs. off-book market at the London Stock Exchange

2011

We empirically study the trading activity in the electronic on-book segment and in the dealership off-book segment of the London Stock Exchange, investigating separately the trading of active market members and of other market participants which are non-members. We find that (i) the volume distribution of off-book transactions has a significantly fatter tail than the one of on-book transactions, (ii) groups of members and non-members can be classified in categories according to their trading profile (iii) there is a strong anticorrelation between the daily inventory variation of a market member due to the on-book market transactions and inventory variation due to the off-book market transac…

Market microstructureFinancial economicsBrokerage datacomputer.software_genreOrder flowFOS: Economics and businessMarket segmentationMarket segmentationSettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.Order (exchange)Stock exchangeEconometricsEconomicsAlgorithmic tradingHigh-frequency tradingAlternative trading systemQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructurePrice impactFinancial marketFlash tradingMarket microstructureSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Trading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)Market depthOpen outcryDark liquidityGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinancecomputerFinance
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Tick Size and Price Diffusion

2011

A tick size is the smallest increment of a security price. Tick size is typically regulated by the exchange where the security is traded and it may be modified either because the exchange enforces an overall tick size change or because the price of the security is too low or too high. There is an extensive literature, partially reviewed in Sect. 2 of the present paper, on the role of tick size in the price formation process. However, the role and the importance of tick size has not been yet fully understood, as testified, for example, by a recent document of the Committee of European Securities Regulators (CESR) [1].

Return distributionFinancial economicsSecurity priceTick sizeEconomicsPrice formation
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Segmentation algorithm for non-stationary compound Poisson processes

2010

We introduce an algorithm for the segmentation of a class of regime switching processes. The segmentation algorithm is a non parametric statistical method able to identify the regimes (patches) of a time series. The process is composed of consecutive patches of variable length. In each patch the process is described by a stationary compound Poisson process, i.e. a Poisson process where each count is associated with a fluctuating signal. The parameters of the process are different in each patch and therefore the time series is non-stationary. Our method is a generalization of the algorithm introduced by Bernaola-Galván, et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 87, 168105 (2001)]. We show that the new algori…

Series (mathematics)GeneralizationEconophysicsProcess (computing)Nonparametric statisticsStochastic processes Statistics Financial markets EconophysicsStochastic processeFinancial marketCondensed Matter PhysicsPoisson distribution01 natural sciencesSignal010305 fluids & plasmasElectronic Optical and Magnetic Materialssymbols.namesake0103 physical sciencesCompound Poisson processsymbolsSegmentation010306 general physicsAlgorithmStatisticMathematicsThe European Physical Journal B
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Topology of correlation-based minimal spanning trees in real and model markets

2003

We present here a topological characterization of the minimal spanning tree that can be obtained by considering the price return correlations of stocks traded in a financial market. We compare the minimal spanning tree obtained from a large group of stocks traded at the New York Stock Exchange during a 12-year trading period with the one obtained from surrogated data simulated by using simple market models. We find that the empirical tree has features of a complex network that cannot be reproduced, even as a first approximation, by a random market model and by the one-factor model.

Spanning treeStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)FOS: Physical sciencesTopology (electrical circuits)Complex networkMinimum spanning treeTopologyTree (graph theory)Settore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica Modelli e Metodi MatematiciCorrelationStock exchangeSimple (abstract algebra)Condensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematics
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How news affect the trading behavior of different categories of investors in a financial market

2015

We investigate the trading behavior of a large set of single investors trading the highly liquid Nokia stock over the period 2003-2008 with the aim of determining the relative role of endogenous and exogenous factors that may affect their behavior. As endogenous factors we consider returns and volatility, whereas the exogenous factors we use are the total daily number of news and a semantic variable based on a sentiment analysis of news. Linear regression and partial correlation analysis of data show that different categories of investors are differently correlated to these factors. Governmental and non profit organizations are weakly sensitive to news and returns or volatility, and, typica…

ta511Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Endogenous Factorsta114Sentiment analysisFinancial marketQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceNon profitFinancial marketInvestor behaviourSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Heterogeneity of agentFOS: Economics and businessSettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.Linear regressionEconometricsEconomicsVolatility (finance)Explanatory powerInformation in capital marketGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceStock (geology)health care economics and organizationsEmpirical time series analysis
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Spanning Trees and bootstrap reliability estimation in correlation based networks

2007

We introduce a new technique to associate a spanning tree to the average linkage cluster analysis. We term this tree as the Average Linkage Minimum Spanning Tree. We also introduce a technique to associate a value of reliability to links of correlation based graphs by using bootstrap replicas of data. Both techniques are applied to the portfolio of the 300 most capitalized stocks traded at New York Stock Exchange during the time period 2001-2003. We show that the Average Linkage Minimum Spanning Tree recognizes economic sectors and sub-sectors as communities in the network slightly better than the Minimum Spanning Tree does. We also show that the average reliability of links in the Minimum …

Physics - Physics and SocietySpanning treecorrelation analysiApplied MathematicsReliability (computer networking)FOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Minimum spanning treeTerm (time)CorrelationTree (data structure)complex networkStock exchangeModeling and SimulationPhysics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityStatisticsAverage Linkage Cluster AnalysisbootstrapEngineering (miscellaneous)Data Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)Mathematicscluster analysis
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Econophysics and the challenge of efficiency

2009

MultidisciplinaryGeneral Computer ScienceEconophysiccomplx systemstochastic processes
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High-Frequency Data

2010

We introduce some of the most common types of high-frequency financial data: tick-by-tick data, trade and quote data, order book data, and market member data. We describe the types of variables that are usually available in the most popular high-frequency financial databases. We discuss the issues related to the handling of these data, including cleaning protocols, timing issues, and issues related to data size. We then briefly consider the issues related to the stylized facts detected in the empirical analysis of high-frequency data. Specifically, we consider (i) the irregular temporal spacing of the events at high frequency and its relevance for the econometric modeling of financial varia…

Market structureEconometric modelStylized factActuarial scienceEconophysicsFinancial marketOrder bookEconomicsRelevance (information retrieval)Market microstructure
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A statistical analysis of the three-fold evolution of genomic compression through frame overlaps in prokaryotes

2007

Abstract Background Among microbial genomes, genetic information is frequently compressed, exploiting redundancies in the genetic code in order to store information in overlapping genes. We investigate the length, phase and orientation properties of overlap in 58 prokaryotic species evaluating neutral and selective mechanisms of evolution. Results Using a variety of statistical null models we find patterns of compressive coding that can not be explained purely in terms of the selective processes favoring genome minimization or translational coupling. The distribution of overlap lengths follows a fat-tailed distribution, in which a significant proportion of overlaps are in excess of 100 base…

Reading FramesFold (higher-order function)ImmunologyReading frameComputational biologyBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEvolution MolecularComplementary DNAGenes OverlappingPoint MutationGenomeslcsh:QH301-705.5GeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneticsModels StatisticalAgricultural and Biological Sciences(all)Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology(all)ResearchApplied MathematicsFrame (networking)Genetic codeStop codonOrder (biology)lcsh:Biology (General)Prokaryotic CellsModeling and SimulationGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesGenome BacterialBiology Direct
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Drift-controlled anomalous diffusion: a solvable Gaussian model

2000

We introduce a Langevin equation characterized by a time dependent drift. By assuming a temporal power-law dependence of the drift we show that a great variety of behavior is observed in the dynamics of the variance of the process. In particular diffusive, subdiffusive, superdiffusive and stretched exponentially diffusive processes are described by this model for specific values of the two control parameters. The model is also investigated in the presence of an external harmonic potential. We prove that the relaxation to the stationary solution is power-law in time with an exponent controlled by one of model parameters.

PhysicsStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Stochastic processAnomalous diffusionFOS: Physical sciencesLangevin equationsymbols.namesakeExponential growthExponentsymbolsRelaxation (physics)Statistical physicsGaussian network modelBrownian motionCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsPhysical review. E, Statistical physics, plasmas, fluids, and related interdisciplinary topics
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Multiscale Model Selection for High-Frequency Financial Data of a Large Tick Stock by Means of the Jensen–Shannon Metric

2014

Modeling financial time series at different time scales is still an open challenge. The choice of a suitable indicator quantifying the distance between the model and the data is therefore of fundamental importance for selecting models. In this paper, we propose a multiscale model selection method based on the Jensen–Shannon distance in order to select the model that is able to better reproduce the distribution of price changes at different time scales. Specifically, we consider the problem of modeling the ultra high frequency dynamics of an asset with a large tick-to-price ratio. We study the price process at different time scales and compute the Jensen–Shannon distance between the original…

Return distributionFinancemodel selectionComputer sciencebusiness.industryEntropy High frequency data Financial markets Market microstructureModel selectionGeneral Physics and AstronomyRanginglcsh:Astrophysicsmultiscale analysimultiscale analysisJensen–Shannon divergencelcsh:QC1-999Markov-switching modelinglcsh:QB460-466EconometricsJensen–Shannon divergencelcsh:Qbusinesslcsh:ScienceStock (geology)high frequency financial datalcsh:PhysicsEntropy
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Levels of complexity in financial markets

2001

We consider different levels of complexity which are observed in the empirical investigation of financial time series. We discuss recent empirical and theoretical work showing that statistical properties of financial time series are rather complex under several ways. Specifically, they are complex with respect to their (i) temporal and (ii) ensemble properties. Moreover, the ensemble return properties show a behavior which is specific to the nature of the trading day reflecting if it is a normal or an extreme trading day.

FOS: Economics and businessStatistics and ProbabilityStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Series (mathematics)Work (electrical)Financial marketEconometricsEconomicsFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceCondensed Matter PhysicsCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsPhysica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
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Correlation, hierarchies, and networks in financial markets

2010

We discuss some methods to quantitatively investigate the properties of correlation matrices. Correlation matrices play an important role in portfolio optimization and in several other quantitative descriptions of asset price dynamics in financial markets. Specifically, we discuss how to define and obtain hierarchical trees, correlation based trees and networks from a correlation matrix. The hierarchical clustering and other procedures performed on the correlation matrix to detect statistically reliable aspects of the correlation matrix are seen as filtering procedures of the correlation matrix. We also discuss a method to associate a hierarchically nested factor model to a hierarchical tre…

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementEconomics and EconometricsPhysics - Physics and SocietyCorrelation based networkKullback–Leibler divergenceStability (learning theory)FOS: Physical sciencesKullback–Leibler distancePhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)computer.software_genreHierarchical clusteringFOS: Economics and businessCorrelationMultivariate analysis Hierarchical clustering Correlation based networks Bootstrap validation Factor models Kullback–Leibler distancePortfolio Management (q-fin.PM)Bootstrap validationQuantitative Finance - Portfolio ManagementMathematicsFactor analysisStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Covariance matrixMultivariate analysiQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceHierarchical clusteringFactor modelTree (data structure)Physics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityData miningPortfolio optimizationcomputerData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)
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What really causes large price changes?

2003

We study the cause of large fluctuations in prices in the London Stock Exchange. This is done at the microscopic level of individual events, where an event is the placement or cancellation of an order to buy or sell. We show that price fluctuations caused by individual market orders are essentially independent of the volume of orders. Instead, large price fluctuations are driven by liquidity fluctuations, variations in the market's ability to absorb new orders. Even for the most liquid stocks there can be substantial gaps in the order book, corresponding to a block of adjacent price levels containing no quotes. When such a gap exists next to the best price, a new order can remove the best q…

Volume-weighted average priceQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureFinancial economicsMid priceFOS: Physical sciencesTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)Market liquidityFOS: Economics and businessCondensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterExecution Commerce optimal liquidationMarket depthOrder (exchange)EconomicsOrder bookEconometricsPrice levelGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinanceLimit priceOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)Quantitative Finance
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Spectral density of the correlation matrix of factor models: a random matrix theory approach.

2005

We studied the eigenvalue spectral density of the correlation matrix of factor models of multivariate time series. By making use of the random matrix theory, we analytically quantified the effect of statistical uncertainty on the spectral density due to the finiteness of the sample. We considered a broad range of models, ranging from one-factor models to hierarchical multifactor models.

CombinatoricsScatter matrixCentering matrixMatrix functionStatistical physicsMultivariate t-distributionNonnegative matrixFinance Commerce correlation matrixRandom matrixSquare matrixData matrix (multivariate statistics)MathematicsPhysical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics
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The multiplex structure of interbank networks

2013

The interbank market has a natural multiplex network representation. We employ a unique database of supervisory reports of Italian banks to the Banca d'Italia that includes all bilateral exposures broken down by maturity and by the secured and unsecured nature of the contract. We find that layers have different topological properties and persistence over time. The presence of a link in a layer is not a good predictor of the presence of the same link in other layers. Maximum entropy models reveal different unexpected substructures, such as network motifs, in different layers. Using the total interbank network or focusing on a specific layer as representative of the other layers provides a po…

Financial economicsComputer scienceNetwork theoryjel:C4901 natural sciencesjel:G21FOS: Economics and businessInterbank marketInterbank network0502 economics and business0103 physical sciencesSystemic riskSystemic riskEconometrics050207 economicsLayer (object-oriented design)010306 general physicsjel:E51Principle of maximum entropy05 social sciencesRepresentation (systemics)Maturity (finance)interbank market network theory systemic riskNetwork theoryInterbank lending marketGeneral Finance (q-fin.GN)Quantitative Finance - General FinanceGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinance
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When do Improved Covariance Matrix Estimators Enhance Portfolio Optimization? An Empirical Comparative Study of Nine Estimators

2010

The use of improved covariance matrix estimators as an alternative to the sample estimator is considered an important approach for enhancing portfolio optimization. Here we empirically compare the performance of 9 improved covariance estimation procedures by using daily returns of 90 highly capitalized US stocks for the period 1997-2007. We find that the usefulness of covariance matrix estimators strongly depends on the ratio between estimation period T and number of stocks N, on the presence or absence of short selling, and on the performance metric considered. When short selling is allowed, several estimation methods achieve a realized risk that is significantly smaller than the one obtai…

Estimation of covariance matricesMatérn covariance functionCovariance functionCovariance matrixStatisticsEconometricsRational quadratic covariance functionCovariance intersectionCovariancePortfolio optimizationMathematicsSSRN Electronic Journal
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The adaptive nature of liquidity taking in limit order books

2014

In financial markets, the order flow, defined as the process assuming value one for buy market orders and minus one for sell market orders, displays a very slowly decaying autocorrelation function. Since orders impact prices, reconciling the persistence of the order flow with market efficiency is a subtle issue. A possible solution is provided by asymmetric liquidity, which states that the impact of a buy or sell order is inversely related to the probability of its occurrence. We empirically find that when the order flow predictability increases in one direction, the liquidity in the opposite side decreases, but the probability that a trade moves the price decreases significantly. While the…

Statistics and ProbabilityQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Limit order book econophysics market efficiencyfinancial instruments and regulationAutocorrelationFinancial marketQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsProbability and statisticsTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)Market liquidityFOS: Economics and businessFlow (mathematics)Order (exchange)risk measure and managementOrder bookEconomicsEconometricsmodels of financial marketStatistics Probability and UncertaintyPredictabilityStatistical and Nonlinear Physic
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Ensemble properties of securities traded in the NASDAQ market

2001

We study the price dynamics of stocks traded in the NASDAQ market by considering the statistical properties of an ensemble of stocks traded simultaneously. For each trading day of our database, we study the ensemble return distribution by extracting its first two central moments. According to previous results obtained for the NYSE market, we find that the second moment is a long-range correlated variable. We compare time-averaged and ensemble-averaged price returns and we show that the two averaging procedures lead to different statistical results.

FOS: Economics and businessStatistics and ProbabilityReturn distributionVariable (computer science)Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)EconometricsQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesSecond moment of areaCondensed Matter PhysicsCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematicsPhysica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
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Volatility in Financial Markets: Stochastic Models and Empirical Results

2002

We investigate the historical volatility of the 100 most capitalized stocks traded in US equity markets. An empirical probability density function (pdf) of volatility is obtained and compared with the theoretical predictions of a lognormal model and of the Hull and White model. The lognormal model well describes the pdf in the region of low values of volatility whereas the Hull and White model better approximates the empirical pdf for large values of volatility. Both models fails in describing the empirical pdf over a moderately large volatility range.

Statistics and ProbabilityStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Stochastic modellingEconophysicFinancial marketFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceStatistical and Nonlinear PhysicsProbability density functionStochastic processeCondensed Matter PhysicsEmpirical probabilitySettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)FOS: Economics and businessVolatilityLognormal modelHullEconomicsEconometricsMathematical PhysicVolatility (finance)Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics
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How News Affect the Trading Behavior of Different Categories of Investors in a Financial Market

2012

We investigate the trading behavior of a large set of single investors trading the highly liquid Nokia stock over the period 2003-2008 with the aim of determining the relative role of endogenous and exogenous factors that may affect their behavior. As endogenous factors we consider returns and volatility, whereas the exogenous factors we use are the total daily number of news and a semantic variable based on a sentiment analysis of news. Linear regression and partial correlation analysis of data show that different categories of investors are differently correlated to these factors. Governmental and non profit organizations are weakly sensitive to news and returns or volatility, and, typica…

Endogenous FactorsSentiment analysisFinancial marketLinear regressionEconomicsEconometricsVolatility (finance)Explanatory powerAffect (psychology)Stock (geology)SSRN Electronic Journal
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Coupling News Sentiment with Web Browsing Data Improves Prediction of Intra-Day Price Dynamics

2015

The new digital revolution of big data is deeply changing our capability of understanding society and forecasting the outcome of many social and economic systems. Unfortunately, information can be very heterogeneous in the importance, relevance, and surprise it conveys, affecting severely the predictive power of semantic and statistical methods. Here we show that the aggregation of web users' behavior can be elicited to overcome this problem in a hard to predict complex system, namely the financial market. Specifically, our in-sample analysis shows that the combined use of sentiment analysis of news and browsing activity of users of Yahoo! Finance greatly helps forecasting intra-day and dai…

0301 basic medicineINFORMATIONEconomicsComputer scienceBig datalcsh:MedicineSocial SciencesQuantitative Finance - Computational Financesocial and economic systemsMathematical and Statistical TechniquesSociologybig dataEconometrics050207 economicsComputer NetworksCapital Marketslcsh:ScienceFinancial Marketsmedia_common050208 financeMultidisciplinary05 social sciencesCommerceSocial CommunicationSettore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica Modelli e Metodi MatematiciSurpriseModels EconomicSocial NetworksPhysical SciencesSocial SystemsEngineering and TechnologyComputational sociologyBEHAVIORStatistics (Mathematics)Network AnalysisResearch ArticleComputer and Information SciencesExploitmedia_common.quotation_subjectTwitterComputational Finance (q-fin.CP)Research and Analysis MethodsFOS: Economics and business03 medical and health sciencesSEARCH0502 economics and businessHumansRelevance (information retrieval)Web navigationInvestmentsStatistical MethodsInternetStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)STOCK-MARKETbusiness.industrylcsh:RSentiment analysisFinancial marketATTENTIONQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceCommunicationsNoise ReductionFinancial Firms030104 developmental biologySignal ProcessingPredictive powerlcsh:QStock marketbusinessSocial MediaFinanceMathematicsForecastingPLOS ONE
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The Structure of Financial Networks

2010

We present here an overview of the use of networks in Finance and Economics. We show how this approach enables us to address important questions as, for example, the structure of control chains in financial systems, the systemic risk associated with them and the evolution of trade between nations. All these results are new in the field and allow for a better understanding and modelling of different economic systems.

FinanceStructure (mathematical logic)EconophysicsFinancial networksbusiness.industryGeography of financeHedge fundSettore FIS/02 - Fisica Teorica Modelli e Metodi MatematiciGravity model of tradeNetworks Finance EconophysicsSystemic riskEconomicsFinancial modelingbusinessIndustrial organization
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How does the market react to your order flow?

2012

We present an empirical study of the intertwined behaviour of members in a financial market. Exploiting a database where the broker that initiates an order book event can be identified, we decompose the correlation and response functions into contributions coming from different market participants and study how their behaviour is interconnected. We find evidence that (1) brokers are very heterogeneous in liquidity provision -- some are consistently liquidity providers while others are consistently liquidity takers. (2) The behaviour of brokers is strongly conditioned on the actions of {\it other} brokers. In contrast brokers are only weakly influenced by the impact of their own previous ord…

Physics - Physics and SocietyQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureMarket microstructureLimit order marketFinancial marketFOS: Physical sciencesBehavioural financePhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Market microstructureMonetary economicsMarket dynamicsFinancial marketFinancial markets microstructure Econophysics stochasti processesTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)Market liquidityFOS: Economics and businessCompetition (economics)Empirical researchOrder (exchange)Physics - Data Analysis Statistics and ProbabilityOrder bookBusinessGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceData Analysis Statistics and Probability (physics.data-an)FinanceQuantitative Finance
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Scaling laws of strategic behavior and size heterogeneity in agent dynamics

2008

The dynamics of many socioeconomic systems is determined by the decision making process of agents. The decision process depends on agent's characteristics, such as preferences, risk aversion, behavioral biases, etc.. In addition, in some systems the size of agents can be highly heterogeneous leading to very different impacts of agents on the system dynamics. The large size of some agents poses challenging problems to agents who want to control their impact, either by forcing the system in a given direction or by hiding their intentionality. Here we consider the financial market as a model system, and we study empirically how agents strategically adjust the properties of large orders in orde…

Physics - Physics and SocietyStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Computer scienceORIGINAggregate (data warehouse)Financial marketComplex systemQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesTime horizonPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)FLUCTUATIONSInvestment (macroeconomics)FOS: Economics and businessFINANCIAL MARKETPRICESOrder (exchange)EconometricsDISTRIBUTIONSPreference (economics)Scaling
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The effect of round-off error on long memory processes

2011

We study how the round-off (or discretization) error changes the statistical properties of a Gaussian long memory process. We show that the autocovariance and the spectral density of the discretized process are asymptotically rescaled by a factor smaller than one, and we compute exactly this scaling factor. Consequently, we find that the discretized process is also long memory with the same Hurst exponent as the original process. We consider the properties of two estimators of the Hurst exponent, namely the local Whittle (LW) estimator and the Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (DFA). By using analytical considerations and numerical simulations we show that, in presence of round-off error, both…

Economics and EconometricsDiscretizationGaussianMathematics - Statistics TheoryStatistics Theory (math.ST)long memory processeFOS: Economics and businesssymbols.namesakeStatisticsFOS: MathematicsApplied mathematicsMathematicsHurst exponentStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Observational errorQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceEstimatordetrended fluctuation analysiround-off errorlong memory processesAutocovariancesymbolsDetrended fluctuation analysisRound-off errorSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)Analysismeasurement errorlocal Whittle estimator
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Scaling and data collapse for the mean exit time of asset prices

2005

We study theoretical and empirical aspects of the mean exit time of financial time series. The theoretical modeling is done within the framework of continuous time random walk. We empirically verify that the mean exit time follows a quadratic scaling law and it has associated a pre-factor which is specific to the analyzed stock. We perform a series of statistical tests to determine which kind of correlation are responsible for this specificity. The main contribution is associated with the autocorrelation property of stock returns. We introduce and solve analytically both a two-state and a three-state Markov chain models. The analytical results obtained with the two-state Markov chain model …

Physics - Physics and SocietyFísica matemàticaFOS: Physical sciencesMarkov processPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)FOS: Economics and businessFINANCEsymbols.namesakeFRACTIONAL CALCULUSQuadratic equationEconometricsNonlinear systemsApplied mathematicsDISTRIBUTIONSTime seriesScalingBrownian motionMathematicsStatistical hypothesis testingRANDOM-WALKSStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Series (mathematics)Markov chainStochastic processSistemes no linealsPhysicsAutocorrelationQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFísicaFLUCTUATIONSMathematical physicssymbolsContinuous-time random walk
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Power-law relaxation in a complex system: Omori law after a financial market crash

2003

We study the relaxation dynamics of a financial market just after the occurrence of a crash by investigating the number of times the absolute value of an index return is exceeding a given threshold value. We show that the empirical observation of a power law evolution of the number of events exceeding the selected threshold (a behavior known as the Omori law in geophysics) is consistent with the simultaneous occurrence of (i) a return probability density function characterized by a power law asymptotic behavior and (ii) a power law relaxation decay of its typical scale. Our empirical observation cannot be explained within the framework of simple and widespread stochastic volatility models.

Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Stochastic volatilityStochastic processFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceAbsolute valueCrashProbability density functionPower lawFOS: Economics and businessLawEconometricsRelaxation (physics)Time seriesCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsMathematicsPhysical Review E
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Modelling Systemic Cojumps with Hawkes Factor Models

2013

Instabilities in the price dynamics of a large number of financial assets are a clear sign of systemic events. By investigating a set of 20 high cap stocks traded at the Italian Stock Exchange, we find that there is a large number of high frequency cojumps. We show that the dynamics of these jumps is described neither by a multivariate Poisson nor by a multivariate Hawkes model. We introduce a Hawkes one factor model which is able to capture simultaneously the time clustering of jumps and the high synchronization of jumps across assets.

symbols.namesakeMultivariate statisticsStock exchangeEconometricssymbolsEconomicsPoisson distributionSynchronizationTime clusteringFactor analysisSign (mathematics)SSRN Electronic Journal
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Market reaction to a bid-ask spread change: a power-law relaxation dynamics.

2009

We study the relaxation dynamics of the bid-ask spread and of the midprice after a sudden variation of the spread in a double auction financial market. We find that the spread decays as a power law to its normal value. We measure the price reversion dynamics and the permanent impact, i.e., the long-time effect on price, of a generic event altering the spread and we find an approximately linear relation between immediate and permanent impact. We hypothesize that the power-law decay of the spread is a consequence of the strategic limit order placement of liquidity providers. We support this hypothesis by investigating several quantities, such as order placement rates and distribution of price…

Computer Science::Computer Science and Game TheoryActuarial scienceStochastic processFinancial marketmicrostructureFinancial markets microstructure stochastic processes relaxation phenomenarelaxation phenomenaFinancial marketPower lawMarket liquiditystochastic processeBid–ask spreadOrder (exchange)EconometricsEconomicsDouble auctionRelaxation (approximation)Physical review. E, Statistical, nonlinear, and soft matter physics
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Dynamics of a financial market index after a crash

2002

We discuss the statistical properties of index returns in a financial market just after a major market crash. The observed non-stationary behavior of index returns is characterized in terms of the exceedances over a given threshold. This characterization is analogous to the Omori law originally observed in geophysics. By performing numerical simulations and theoretical modelling, we show that the nonlinear behavior observed in real market crashes cannot be described by a GARCH(1,1) model. We also show that the time evolution of the Value at Risk observed just after a major crash is described by a power-law function lacking a typical scale.

Statistics and ProbabilityStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Index (economics)Actuarial scienceStatistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)EconophysicsScale (ratio)Autoregressive conditional heteroskedasticityFinancial marketFOS: Physical sciencesQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceCrashFunction (mathematics)Condensed Matter PhysicsFOS: Economics and businessEconophysicsFinancial marketsCrashesValue at RiskEconometricsEconomicsCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsValue at riskPhysica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
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Diffusive Behavior and the Modeling of Characteristic Times in Limit Order Executions

2007

We present a study of the order book data of the London Stock Exchange for five highly liquid stocks traded during the calendar year 2002. Specifically, we study the first passage time of order book prices needed to observe a prescribed price change Delta, the time to fill (TTF) for executed limit orders and the time to cancel (TTC) for canceled ones. We find that the distribution of the first passage time decays asymptotically in time as a power law with an exponent L_FPT ~ 1.5. The median of the same quantity scales as Delta^1.6, which is different from the Delta^2 behavior expected for Brownian motion. The quantities TTF, and TTC are also asymptotically power law distributed with exponen…

StatisticsOrder bookExponentStatistical physicsLimit (mathematics)First-hitting-time modelRandom walkPower lawScalingBrownian motionMathematicsSSRN Electronic Journal
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Do Firms Share the Same Functional Form of Their Growth Rate Distribution? A New Statistical Test

2011

We propose a hypothesis testing procedure to investigate whether the same growth rate distribution is shared by all the firms in a balanced panel or, more generally, whether they share the same functional form for this distribution, without necessarily sharing the same parameters. We apply the test to panels of US and European Union publicly quoted manufacturing firms, both at the sectoral and at the subsectoral NAICS levels. We consider the following null hypotheses about the growth rate distribution of the individual firms: i) an unknown shape common to all firms, with all the firms sharing also the same parameters, or with the firm variance related to its firm size through a scaling rela…

business.industryDistribution (economics)Variance (accounting)North American Industry Classification SystemEconometricsEconomicsmedia_common.cataloged_instanceGrowth rateEuropean unionNull hypothesisbusinessScalingStatistical hypothesis testingmedia_commonSSRN Electronic Journal
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Air Transport Network: a short review

2013

Networks complex systems transport air traffic management
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Modeling the dynamics os a financial index after a crash

2004

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The key role of liquidity fluctuations in detrmining large price fluctuations

2005

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Generation of hierarchically correlated multivariate symbolic sequences: With an application to the assessment of bootstrap confidence in phylogeneti…

2008

We introduce a method to generate multivariate series of symbols from a finite alphabet with a given hierarchical structure of similarities based on the Hamming distance. The target hierarchical structure of similarities is arbitrary, for instance the one obtained by some hierarchical clustering method applied to an empirical matrix of similarities. The method that we present here is based on a generating mechanism that does not make use of mutation rate, which is widely used in phylogenetic analysis. Here we use the proposed simulation method to investigate the relationship between the bootstrap value associated with a node of a phylogeny and the probability of finding that node in the tru…

Complex systems Multivariate analysis Combinatoricgraph theory
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Coupling and Complexity of Interaction of STCA Networks

2009

This paper provides an overview on the results of an ENAV feasibility study, where we exploited an automatic safety data gathering tool to analyze the ATM system performances. In particular, it addresses the use of the EUROCONTROL tool, ASMT (Automatic Safety Monitoring Tool), as a support to monitor STCA performance. The contribution of this study is to explore how analysis methods derived from complex systems theory (i.e. network analysis) can assist in the understanding, monitoring and management of the performance of ATM systems. Our data show that a large number of STCAs do not occur in isolation, but rather that in roughly half of the cases the aircraft involved in an STCA are subsequ…

Air Traffic Management Networks Complex systems
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Econofisica: il contributo dei fisici allo studio dei sistemi economici

2005

Econofisica sistemi complessiSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)
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Modeling FX market activity around macroeconomic news: a Hawkes process approach

2014

We present a Hawkes model approach to foreign exchange market in which the high frequency price dynamics is affected by a self exciting mechanism and an exogenous component, generated by the pre-announced arrival of macroeconomic news. By focusing on time windows around the news announcement, we find that the model is able to capture the increase of trading activity after the news, both when the news has a sizeable effect on volatility and when this effect is negligible, either because the news in not important or because the announcement is in line with the forecast by analysts. We extend the model by considering non-causal effects, due to the fact that the existence of the news (but not i…

FOS: Economics and businessQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSTrading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)
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Complexity in Air Traffic Management, Complex Systems

2011

Air Traffic managementSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)
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Market reaction to temporary liquidity crises and the permanent market impact

2006

We study the relaxation dynamics of the bid-ask spread and of the midprice after a sudden, large variation of the spread, corresponding to a temporary crisis of liquidity in a double auction financial market. We find that the spread decays very slowly to its normal value as a consequence of the strategic limit order placement of liquidity providers. We consider several quantities, such as order placement rates and distribution, that affect the decay of the spread. We measure the permanent impact both of a generic event altering the spread and of a single transaction and we find an approximately linear relation between immediate and permanent impact in both cases.

FOS: Economics and businessPhysics - Physics and SocietyQuantitative Finance - Trading and Market MicrostructureFOS: Physical sciencesPhysics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Trading and Market Microstructure (q-fin.TR)
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Ultrametric matrices and factor models

2005

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Networks in Finance

2010

EconophysicsNetworkFinanceFinance Networks Econophysics
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High frequency data entry: statistical findings at high frequency

2010

We introduce some of the most common types of high-frequency financial data: tick-by-tick data, trade andquote data, order bookdata, andmarket member data. We describe the types of variables that are usually available in the most popular high-frequency financial databases. We discuss the issues related to the handling of these data, including cleaning protocols, timing issues, and issues related to data size. We then briefly consider the issues related to the stylized facts detected in the empirical analysis of high- frequency data. Specifically, we consider (i) the irregular temporal spacing of the events at high frequency and its relevance for the econometric modeling of financial variables, (…

financial markets high-frequency data data analysis tick-by-tick data order bookdata market microstructure econophysicsSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)
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Statistics of order flow

2010

market microstructureeconophysicsfinancial marketOrder flow market microstructure financial markets econophysicsOrder flow
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The long memory of efficient market

2004

For the London Stock Exchange we demonstrate that the signs of orders obey a long-memory process. The autocorrelation function decays roughly as a power law with an exponent of 0.6, corresponding to a Hurst exponent H = 0.7. This implies that the signs of future orders are quite predictable from the signs of past orders; all else being equal, this would suggest a very strong market inefficiency. We demonstrate, however, that fluctuations in order signs are compensated for by anti-correlated fluctuations in transaction size and liquidity, which are also long-memory processes that act to make the returns whiter. We show that some institutions display long-range memory and others don't.

Execution Commerce optimal liquidation
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