Abstract

Financial markets are usually investigated through time series such as prices and volumes that describe the behavior of the system as a whole. Such observables emerge from microeconomic interactions between market participants. Agent-based models have been utilized to shed light on this process. The model's ability to produce statistics frequently found in empirical data is evidence of some correspondence with real markets. Here, an agent-based market model is proposed. Different trader profiles with short- and long-term motivations are considered, and limitations on the agents' skills to manipulate information are inserted into the model. According to their profile and limitations, agents are rational. A differential equationapproximation is employed to find the value to which the price converges and the timescale of this process. The relationship between agents' attributes and the evolution of their wealth is explored in different scenarios. Agent's average wealth was not significantly affected by information processing accuracy, but the standard deviation was. The increased risk is the main consequence of low accuracy. The model yielded price series with multifractal behavior and heavy-tailed return distributions, which are nontrivial statistics frequently observed in empirical series.

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