Abstract

How different are the emerging and the well-developed stock markets in terms of efficiency? To gain insights into this question, we compared an important emerging market, the Chinese stock market, and the largest and the most developed market, the US stock market. Specifically, we computed the Lempel–Ziv complexity (LZ) and the permutation entropy (PE) from two composite stock indices, the Shanghai stock exchange composite index (SSE) and the Dow Jones industrial average (DJIA), for both low-frequency (daily) and high-frequency (minute-to-minute)stock index data. We found that the US market is basically fully random and consistent with efficient market hypothesis (EMH), irrespective of whether low- or high-frequency stock index data are used. The Chinese market is also largely consistent with the EMH when low-frequency data are used. However, a completely different picture emerges when the high-frequency stock index data are used, irrespective of whether the LZ or PE is computed. In particular, the PE decreases substantially in two significant time windows, each encompassing a rapid market rise and then a few gigantic stock crashes. To gain further insights into the causes of the difference in the complexity changes in the two markets, we computed the Hurst parameter H from the high-frequency stock index data of the two markets and examined their temporal variations. We found that in stark contrast with the US market, whose H is always close to 1/2, which indicates fully random behavior, for the Chinese market, H deviates from 1/2 significantly for time scales up to about 10 min within a day, and varies systemically similar to the PE for time scales from about 10 min to a day. This opens the door for large-scale collective behavior to occur in the Chinese market, including herding behavior and large-scale manipulation as a result of inside information.

Highlights

  • It is generally thought that the level of development of a capital market of a country is closely related to the degree of its economic development

  • We examined whether low-frequency stock data can be used for detecting the complexity changes in the Chinese and the US stock markets by computing the temporal variations of Lempel–Ziv complexity (LZ) and permutation entropy (PE) using daily stock index data

  • Capital markets sometimes exhibit behaviors that are inconsistent with the efficient market hypothesis (EMH)

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Summary

Introduction

It is generally thought that the level of development of a capital market of a country is closely related to the degree of its economic development. A healthy capital market can provide an effective platform for financing the enterprise of the country. To realize this goal, stock prices in the market have to fluctuate randomly [1], so that wealth will not be drawn out of the market by simple exploitation of the systemic patterns in the market. Complexity science is rich in concepts, theories, and models, and can offer innovative solutions in vastly different scenarios, and tremendously help with problem formulation. It is especially interesting to note that complexity science has been successfully applied to study many important problems in humanities, including disasters, crime, terrorism, wars, and epidemics [53,54]

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