Financial symmetry and moods in the market.

This paper studies how certain speculative transitions in financial markets can be ascribed to a symmetry break that happens in the collective decision making. Investors are assumed to be bounded rational, using a limited set of information including past price history and expectation on future divi...

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Main Authors: Roberto Savona, Maxence Soumare, Jørgen Vitting Andersen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118224
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spelling doaj-117e480ce49640a1a380ff796e31b3c12021-03-03T20:06:25ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01104e011822410.1371/journal.pone.0118224Financial symmetry and moods in the market.Roberto SavonaMaxence SoumareJørgen Vitting AndersenThis paper studies how certain speculative transitions in financial markets can be ascribed to a symmetry break that happens in the collective decision making. Investors are assumed to be bounded rational, using a limited set of information including past price history and expectation on future dividends. Investment strategies are dynamically changed based on realized returns within a game theoretical scheme with Nash equilibria. In such a setting, markets behave as complex systems whose payoff reflect an intrinsic financial symmetry that guarantees equilibrium in price dynamics (fundamentalist state) until the symmetry is broken leading to bubble or anti-bubble scenarios (speculative state). We model such two-phase transition in a micro-to-macro scheme through a Ginzburg-Landau-based power expansion leading to a market temperature parameter which modulates the state transitions in the market. Via simulations we prove that transitions in the market price dynamics can be phenomenologically explained by the number of traders, the number of strategies and amount of information used by agents, all included in our market temperature parameter.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118224
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roberto Savona
Maxence Soumare
Jørgen Vitting Andersen
spellingShingle Roberto Savona
Maxence Soumare
Jørgen Vitting Andersen
Financial symmetry and moods in the market.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Roberto Savona
Maxence Soumare
Jørgen Vitting Andersen
author_sort Roberto Savona
title Financial symmetry and moods in the market.
title_short Financial symmetry and moods in the market.
title_full Financial symmetry and moods in the market.
title_fullStr Financial symmetry and moods in the market.
title_full_unstemmed Financial symmetry and moods in the market.
title_sort financial symmetry and moods in the market.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description This paper studies how certain speculative transitions in financial markets can be ascribed to a symmetry break that happens in the collective decision making. Investors are assumed to be bounded rational, using a limited set of information including past price history and expectation on future dividends. Investment strategies are dynamically changed based on realized returns within a game theoretical scheme with Nash equilibria. In such a setting, markets behave as complex systems whose payoff reflect an intrinsic financial symmetry that guarantees equilibrium in price dynamics (fundamentalist state) until the symmetry is broken leading to bubble or anti-bubble scenarios (speculative state). We model such two-phase transition in a micro-to-macro scheme through a Ginzburg-Landau-based power expansion leading to a market temperature parameter which modulates the state transitions in the market. Via simulations we prove that transitions in the market price dynamics can be phenomenologically explained by the number of traders, the number of strategies and amount of information used by agents, all included in our market temperature parameter.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0118224
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