Public release date: 14-May-2003
Contact: Denise Brehm [EMAIL PROTECTED] 617-253-2700
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/www/

Stock trade patterns could help predict financial earthquakes

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--The stock market has its share of shakeups, but who would
guess that large movements in this man-made system adhere to a similar
pattern
of predictability as earthquake magnitudes?

After analyzing four years of data from the world financial markets, an
interdisciplinary team comprising an economist at the Massachusetts
Institute
of Technology and physicists from Boston University discovered that
large-scale
events in the stock market adhere to distinct patterns. They believe that
market analysts could use these new findings to partially predict the chance
of
a market crash, although prevention is not possible.

"The frequency of crashes such as those in 1987 and 1929 follow these
patterns," said Xavier Gabaix, assistant professor of economics at MIT and
lead
author of the paper describing this research, which is appearing in the May
15
issue of Nature. "But that doesn't mean we'll be able to predict with
certainty
when a change will occur or which direction the change will go."

The patterns found by the scientists are "power laws"--which describe
mathematical relationships between the frequency of large and small events.
One
such power law is used to forecast the chances that an earthquake of a given
magnitude will occur.

In short, the scientists have shown that stock markets have a mathematical
elegance frequently found in natural systems.

"We have found that the artificial world of the financial markets follows a
pattern similar to one found in our natural world," said Gabaix. "Trading on
the stock market has a lot of randomness, but at the end of the day you find
that a pattern emerges that matches power-law patterns found empirically in
data from systems as diverse as earthquakes and human language."

The team also found that the actions of large market participants, like
mutual
funds, produce this power-law behavior when they trade stock under time
pressure.

"We want to understand financial earthquakes in order to protect people like
you and me, whose retirement is tied up in the markets," said Professor H.
Eugene Stanley, director of the Center for Polymer Studies at BU and a
co-author of the paper. "Fortunately in Tokyo they build buildings so that
they
don't succumb to earthquakes. We need to do the same thing in economics." BU
physicists Dr. Parameswaran Gopikrishnan and Dr. Vasiliki Plerou are also
co-authors.

"But our research suggests that the forces that give rise to the power laws
of
stock market fluctuations are extremely robust," said Gabaix. "So
unfortunately, such crashes would be very, very hard to prevent.

"If you put an extremely large amount of friction--in the form of
regulations--into the system, you could prevent the crashes. But moderate
amounts of frictions will make no difference," he added. "In any case,
before
we can give advice on policy, we need more research to better understand all
those regularities in the stock market."

When applied to a precise computer model, the power laws might allow market
analysts to predict a crash, but not necessarily prevent it.

"We believe that the computer model presently used by most analysts
undercounts
the number of large, rare events. That is what we're looking at next," said
Gabaix. "If we combine physics methods and economic reasoning, we may be on
the
right track."

EMERGING PATTERNS

In their paper, the scientists show that--for the market as a whole and for
an
individual stock--the daily volume of stocks traded, number of trades and
price
fluctuations follow power laws.

For example, the number of days when a particular stock price moves by 1
percent will be eight times the number of days when that stock moves by 2
percent, which will in turn be eight times the number of days when that
stock
moves by 4 percent, which will in turn be eight times the number of days
that
stock moves by 8 percent, and so on.

The same relationship (called the inverse cubic pattern) characterizes the
number of daily trades. A similar power law (the inverse half-cubic pattern)
describes the number of shares traded each day.

For instance, if 100,000 shares of Apple stock were traded on 512 days
during a
certain period, then you can predict that there would be 64 days when
400,000
shares of Apple stock were traded, and eight days when 1,600,000 shares of
Apple stock were traded, and one day when 6,400,000 shares of Apple stock
were
traded.

To understand these patterns, the scientists looked at the size of large
traders, such as mutual funds with more than $100 million in assets. They
found
that their size also follows a power law. The number of funds that manage $1
billion is twice the number of funds with $2 billion, which in turn is twice
the number of funds with $4 billion, and so on. (This pattern is called
Zipf's
Law, named after linguist George Kingsley Zipf, who in the 1930s found the
statistical pattern in the frequency of word use in languages.)

The scientists prove that the patterns in daily trades, returns and volume
are
generated by the actions of large market participants when they trade stock
under time pressure. Stocks traded under time pressure by mutual funds cause
stock prices to change; these actions are enough to generate these patterns.

Hence, a lot of the large movements of the market, such as the days of small
"crashes" when prices seem to move for no good reason, can ultimately be
traced
back to the behavior of some very large players.

MARKETS OFFER MOUNTAINS OF DATA

Physicists Stanley, Gopikrishnan and Plerou had previously described the
power
law in stock price fluctuations in a paper published four years ago. Gabaix,
an
economist whose research focuses on power laws and irrational behavior,
teamed
up with them to apply the laws to stock volume and number of trades, and to
find an explanation for the patterns.

"We did not expect our findings to be of this magnitude. Usually in physics
your research fine-tunes someone else's findings; you don't find something
totally new," said Stanley, whose own research focuses on complex systems in
nature, including medical problems like Alzheimer's. He said the physicists
began looking at the stock market data because it was there.

"For most science, you have to create the data. But here was a complex
system
where the data was just sitting there," he said.

Gabaix and the BU research team analyzed about 100 million transactions from
the world financial markets--all the transactions from 1994-96--and
discovered
the mathematical pattern hidden in the data.


###
The National Science Foundation and the Russell Sage Foundation funded the
research.

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-05/miot-stp050803.php







News in Brain and Behavioural Sciences - Issue 95 - 12th May, 2003
http://human-nature.com/nibbs/issue95.html




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