Search results for "Statistical finance"

showing 10 items of 52 documents

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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Emergence of statistically validated financial intraday lead-lag relationships

2014

According to the leading models in modern finance, the presence of intraday lead-lag relationships between financial assets is negligible in efficient markets. With the advance of technology, however, markets have become more sophisticated. To determine whether this has resulted in an improved market efficiency, we investigate whether statistically significant lagged correlation relationships exist in financial markets. We introduce a numerical method to statistically validate links in correlation-based networks, and employ our method to study lagged correlation networks of equity returns in financial markets. Crucially, our statistical validation of lead-lag relationships accounts for mult…

Bootstrap methodFinancial market01 natural sciencesLead-lag correlation010305 fluids & plasmasFOS: Economics and businessCorrelationSettore SECS-S/06 -Metodi Mat. dell'Economia e d. Scienze Attuariali e Finanz.Statistically validated network0502 economics and business0103 physical sciencesStatisticsEconomicsEconometricsStock (geology)FinanceStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)050208 financeHigh-frequency databusiness.industry05 social sciencesFinancial marketMarket efficiencyEquity (finance)Quantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceStock returnSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Economics Econometrics and Finance (all)2001 Economics Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)Multiple comparisons problemLead–lag compensatorbusinessGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceTransaction dataFinanceQuantitative Finance
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Long term memories of developed and emerging markets: using the scaling analysis to characterize their stage of development

2004

The scaling properties encompass in a simple analysis many of the volatility characteristics of financial markets. That is why we use them to probe the different degree of markets development. We empirically study the scaling properties of daily Foreign Exchange rates, Stock Market indices and fixed income instruments by using the generalized Hurst approach. We show that the scaling exponents are associated with characteristics of the specific markets and can be used to differentiate markets in their stage of development. The robustness of the results is tested by both Monte-Carlo studies and a computation of the scaling in the frequency-domain.

Condensed Matter - Other Condensed MatterFOS: Economics and businessStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)Quantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter - Statistical MechanicsOther Condensed Matter (cond-mat.other)
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Networked relationships in the e-MID Interbank market: A trading model with memory

2014

Interbank markets are fundamental for bank liquidity management. In this paper, we introduce a model of interbank trading with memory. Our model reproduces features of preferential trading patterns in the e-MID market recently empirically observed through the method of statistically validated networks. The memory mechanism is used to introduce a proxy of trust in the model. The key idea is that a lender, having lent many times to a borrower in the past, is more likely to lend to that borrower again in the future than to other borrowers, with which the lender has never (or has in- frequently) interacted. The core of the model depends on only one parameter representing the initial attractiven…

Economics and EconometricsControl and OptimizationComputer scienceHBJava/MasonMicroeconomicsFOS: Economics and businessInterbank marketOrder (exchange)Statistically validated networkEconometricsEconomicsNetwork formationProxy (statistics)Structure (mathematical logic)Statistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Applied MathematicsQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceLiquidity riskVariety (cybernetics)Network formationCore (game theory)Reciprocity (network science)Interbank lending marketQuantitative Finance - General FinanceGeneral Finance (q-fin.GN)
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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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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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Sector identification in a set of stock return time series traded at the London Stock Exchange

2005

We compare 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 portfolio of stocks traded at the London Stock Exchange. The investigated time series are recorded both at a daily time horizon and at a 5-minute time horizon. The correlation coefficient matrix is very different at different time horizons confirming that more structured correlation coefficient matrices are observed for long time horizons. All the considered methods are able to detect econo…

FOS: Economics and businessPhysics - Physics and SocietyStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)SYSTEMSEXPRESSION DATAQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesFINANCIAL-MARKETSDisordered Systems and Neural Networks (cond-mat.dis-nn)Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph)Condensed Matter - Disordered Systems and Neural NetworksMATRICESNOISE
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Tick size and price diffusion

2010

A tick size is the smallest increment of a security price. It is clear that at the shortest time scale on which individual orders are placed the tick size has a major role which affects where limit orders can be placed, the bid-ask spread, etc. This is the realm of market microstructure and there is a vast literature on the role of tick size on market microstructure. However, tick size can also affect price properties at longer time scales, and relatively less is known about the effect of tick size on the statistical properties of prices. The present paper is divided in two parts. In the first we review the effect of tick size change on the market microstructure and the diffusion properties…

FOS: Economics and businessStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Market microstructureEconophysicsFinancial markets Market microstructure Stochastic processes EconophysicsQuantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFinancial marketStochastic processe
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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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Using the Scaling Analysis to Characterize Financial Markets

2003

We empirically analyze the scaling properties of daily Foreign Exchange rates, Stock Market indices and Bond futures across different financial markets. We study the scaling behaviour of the time series by using a generalized Hurst exponent approach. We verify the robustness of this approach and we compare the results with the scaling properties in the frequency-domain. We find evidence of deviations from the pure Brownian motion behavior. We show that these deviations are associated with characteristics of the specific markets and they can be, therefore, used to distinguish the different degrees of development of the markets.

FOS: Economics and businessStatistical Finance (q-fin.ST)Statistical Mechanics (cond-mat.stat-mech)jel:G1Quantitative Finance - Statistical FinanceFOS: Physical sciencesCondensed Matter - Statistical Mechanicsscaling exponents time series analysis multi-fractals financial market
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