English

Speculation and Power Law

Statistical Finance 2016-12-28 v1

Abstract

It is now well established empirically that financial price changes are distributed according to a power law, with cubic exponent. This is a fascinating regularity, as it holds for various classes of securities, on various markets, and on various time scales. The universality of this law suggests that there must be some basic, general and stable mechanism behind it. The standard (neoclassical) paradigm implies no such mechanism. Agent-based models of financial markets, on the other hand, exhibit realistic price changes, but they involve relatively complicated, and often mathematically intractable, mechanisms. This paper identifies a simple principle behind the power law: the feedback intrinsic to the very idea of speculation, namely buying when one expects a price rise (and selling when one expects a price fall). By this feedback, price changes follow a random coefficient autoregressive process, and therefore they have a power law by Kesten theorem.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1612.08705,
  title  = {Speculation and Power Law},
  author = {Sabiou Inoua},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1612.08705},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

11 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-22T17:35:23.542Z