Abstract

Twenty five years ago, several authors proposed to describe the forward interest rate curve (FRC) as an elastic string along which idiosyncratic shocks propagate, accounting for the peculiar structure of the return correlation across different maturities. In this paper, we revisit the specific ‘stiff’ elastic string field theory of Baaquie and Bouchaud [Stiff field theory of interest rates and psychological future time. Wilmott Mag., 2004, 2–6] in a way that makes its micro-foundation more transparent. Our model can be interpreted as capturing the effect of market forces that set the rates of nearby tenors in a self-referential fashion. The model is parsimonious and accurately reproduces the whole correlation structure of the FRC over the time period 1994–2023, with an error around 1% and with only one adjustable parameter, the value of which being very stable across the last three decades. The dependence of correlation on time resolution (also called the Epps effect) is also faithfully reproduced within the model and leads to a cross-tenor information propagation time on the order of 30 minutes. Finally, we confirm that the perceived time in interest rate markets is a strongly sub-linear function of real time, as surmised by Baaquie and Bouchaud [Stiff field theory of interest rates and psychological future time. Wilmott Mag., 2004, 2–6]. In fact, our results are fully compatible with hyperbolic discounting, in line with the recent behavioral Finance literature Farmer and Geanakoplos [Hyperbolic Discounting is Rational: Valuing the Far Future with Uncertain Discount Rates, Cowles Foundation Discussion Papers, 2009 (Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Yale University)].

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