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Consensus and Market Models: Stylized facts in a Sznajd World

Consensus and Market Models: Stylized facts in a Sznajd World. Collective behaviour in markets. Trends Crashes We also know that: Traders talk to each other (sometimes through third parties…) Traders have similar constraints ( market regulation)

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Consensus and Market Models: Stylized facts in a Sznajd World

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  1. Consensus and Market Models:Stylized facts in a Sznajd World

  2. Collective behaviour in markets • Trends • Crashes We also know that: • Traders talk to each other (sometimes through third parties…) • Traders have similar constraints ( market regulation) • Traders avail of common sources of information (press, databases, consultant reports, fundamental economic factors and models)

  3. Consensus Price changes depending on the difference between demand and supply Demand and supply depend on • number of agents keen on buying or selling • amount of an asset individually traded by agents Here we focus on • number of buyers and sellers • why they buy or sell We model these features in terms of Consensus dynamics

  4. Sznajd Consensus Model:‘United we stand, divided we fall’ Abraham Lincoln Within human societies, it is generally easier to change someone‘s opinion by acting within from within a group than by acting alone. Place agents (spins) on 2-d lattice: • Each sitecarries a spin S that may be up or down (two possible opinions,yes or no) • Twoneighbouring parallel spinsare able to convince other neighboursof their opinion. • If these twoneighbours are not parallel or in step,they haveno influenceon their neighbours.

  5. Sznajd Model and synchronous updating Allowing system to evolve via • random sequential updating • always leads to total orientation of spins (total consensus) We choose asynchronous updating mechanism: It admits possibility of contradictory information. Effects of single interaction may last for a certain time In Sznajd model, synchronous updating carries new feature frustration

  6. Frustration • Parallel pairs of spins induce neighbours to turn to their same state. • However single spin may often belong, simultaneously, to neighbourhood of more than one couple of like-oriented spins • up to 4, on 2D lattice • If neighbouring pairs have different orientations, state of individual spin does not change -> Frustration ?

  7. ΔP is absolute difference of opinions at t=0 Phase transitionsin a synchronously updated Sznajd Model ΔPc

  8. Variation on a log-log scale of 1-Mc with lattice size, L, in the absence of noise or zero temperature. When the initial net magnetisation, M(0)>Mc the system evolves to complete consensus (M(equilibrium)=1). When the initial net magnetisation, M(0)<Mc the system never reaches complete consensus (M(equilibrium )<1).

  9. Introducing random noise (random change of individual opinions) Non-monotonic Magnetization

  10. Microscopic interpretation Spins surrounded by four others of the same sign, so forming cross-shaped islands, form a stable state. At zero temperature, they are prevented, at any time, from flipping by frustration. Random noise acts flipping one of the five spins, so allowing frustration to be removed.

  11. What does the noise account for ? • External factor influence • Degree of ‘connection’ between neighbouring agents • Independence of thought

  12. Basic stylized facts…Minimum requirements for any market model • Fat tails in the probability density distribution of returns, volumes and volatility • (Almost) no time-correlation between the directions of price fluctuations • Long lasting time correlation (power law decay) between the absolute values of price fluctuations.

  13. A Market Model • Price formation as a Consensus Process • Noise as a measure of the degree of connection between agents and independence of thought. • Risk perception (measured through volatility) may change the degree of connection.

  14. Sznajd-like price formation process Given N unbiased agents p_initial=0.5, random configuration. before each transaction they interact for ntime steps (on average). Each of them may change opinion (independently of the others) with probability q.

  15. Volatility shocks and q changes • The updating of q may happen either through deterministic or stochastic rules. • In both cases q changes depend on the volatility changes • E.g.: one may use following stochastic rule

  16. Stylized facts in a Sznajd World Example: for L=50 (2500 agents), p_initial=0.5, alpha=0.98, N_iterations=400 Lower tail exponent=2.7 Upper tail exponent=2.6 Upper cut-off tail exponent=4.1 Lower cut-off tail exponent=3.9

  17. (Almost) No-time-correlation between returns • Significant time-correlation between absolute returns

  18. Conclusions • Opinion dynamics play role in price formation • Sznajd consensus model may describe price formation process • Noise, as measure of independence of thought and external influence, plays non trivial role in determining consensus • Noise changes driven by Volatility changes may ( partly) explain some relevant stylized facts observed in financial time series • fat tails in histograms of returns and volatility • long memory and clustering of volatility)

  19. Outlook :What’s next ? • More realistic topologies for more realistic models • Heterogeneous size of transactions • Non-uniform time duration between consecutive transactions • Other stylized facts

  20. References • Mantegna R.N. and Stanley H.E An Introduction to Econophysics, Cambridge University Press 2000 • Johnson N. F., Jefferies P., Huy P.M. Financial Market Complexity. Oxford Finance 2003 • Bouchaud J. P. and Potter M. Theory of Financial Risks : From Statistical Physics to Risk Management. Cambridge University Press 2000. • Sznajd-Weron, K.; Sznajd, J. Opinion Evolution in Closed Community. Int. J. Mod. Phys. C 11 1157-1166 (2000). • Stauffer, D. Monte Carlo Simulations of the Sznajd model, Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation 5, No.1 paper 4 (2002) (jasss.soc.surrey.ac.uk). • Stauffer, D. Frustration from Simultaneous Updating in Sznajd Consensus Model. (cond-mat/0207598 Preprint for J. Math. Sociology) • Sabatelli, L.; Richmond, P. Phase transitions, memory and frustration in a Sznajd-like model with synchronous updating. Int. J. Mod.Phys C 14 No. 9 (2003) (cond-mat/0305015). • Sabatelli, L.; Richmond, P. Non-monotonic spontaneous magnetization in a Sznajd-like Consensus Model. To be published in Physica A (cond-mat/0309375)

  21. Stylised facts • Why is the pdf tail equal to 3? • Is it a tunable parameter or more like a critical exponent? • What are minimum requirements needed to get the familiar stylised facts? • Are we looking at all the relevant stylised facts? • Time? • Shape, asymmetry of speculative peaks? • Log periodic oscillations? • Higher order correlations

  22. Agents • What form does heterogeneity take? • How do people differ? • What do they order at the restaurant? • Is only time heterogeneity required for fat tails and clustered volatility?

  23. Networks • How are we connected? • How do connections and nodes evolve? • Risk • How do we evolve containment and innoculation strategies? • Diffuse rumour & heresy • Social problems • Eg Drug addiction, smoking, disease

  24. Financial markets are only a part of the subject • Many other economic systems • Impact on social and regulatory policy • Electricity • Telecommunications • Transport • Taxation • Impact on wealth • Real options, • Weather derivatives, etc • Real worlds (Ormorod)

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