Abstract

We discuss the results of three recent phenomenological studies focussed on understanding the distinctive statistical properties of financial time series – (i) The probability distribution of stock price fluctuations: Stock price fluctuations occur in all magnitudes, in analogy to earthquakes – from tiny fluctuations to very drastic events, such as the crash of 19 October 1987, sometimes referred to as “Black Monday”. The distribution of price fluctuations decays with a power-law tail well outside the Lévy stable regime and describes fluctuations that differ by as much as 8 orders of magnitude. In addition, this distribution preserves its functional form for fluctuations on time scales that differ by 3 orders of magnitude, from 1 min up to approximately 10 days. (ii) Correlations in financial time series: While price fluctuations themselves have rapidly decaying correlations, the magnitude of fluctuations measured by either the absolute value or the square of the price fluctuations has correlations that decay as a power-law, persisting for several months. (iii) Volatility and trading activity: We quantify the relation between trading activity – measured by the number of transactions N Δ t – and the price change G Δ t for a given stock, over a time interval [t, t+ Δt] . We find that N Δ t displays long-range power-law correlations in time, which leads to the interpretation that the long-range correlations previously found for | G Δ t | are connected to those of N Δ t .

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