Title: Size matters
1Size matters
- János Kertész, Zoltán Eisler
- Budapest University of Technology and Economics
2Outline
- Universality in physics
- Universality in finance?
- In-depth analysis of
- traded value distributions
- correlations
- intertrade times
- Summary
3Universality in physics
- 5 different magnetic materials (CrBr3, EuO, Ni,
YIG, Pd3Fe) - the curves collapse
- different systems behave the same
- power law behavior, e.g.,
H.E. Stanley, Rev. Mod. Phys. 71, 358 (1999)
4Universality in finance?
- the inverse cube law
- price changes (returns)
- 1000 NYSE companies
- outside Levy regime
a 3
P. Gopikrishnan et al., Physica A 287, 362-373
(2000)
5Universality in finance?
- the inverse cube law
- the inverse half cube law
- trading volume (Q) or value (f)
- Levy stable
Delicate questions related to extrapolation
P. Gopikrishnan et al., Phys. Rev. E 62, 4493
(2000)
6Basic measures of trading activity (1)
- number of trades during ?t
- exchanged value in trade n
- traded value (capital flow) during ?t
7Basic measures of trading activity (1)
- number of trades during ?t
- exchanged value in trade n
- traded value (capital flow) during ?t
8Basic measures of trading activity (2)
- company capitalization the total value of all
stocks, proxy of company size
9Basic measures of trading activity (2)
- company capitalization the total value of all
stocks, proxy of company size
- trivially there must be an influence
- but what is it like?
10Average activity
- G. Zumbach (2004)
- FTSE-100 (large)
- power laws
G. Zumbach, Quant. Fin. 4, 441-456 (2004)
11An extended analysis
- We drop the restriction to high capitalization
- all 3347 stocks traded at NYSE during 2000
- Trading activity
- Traded value
- Intertrade times
12Average activity
- NYSE, 3347 stocks (2000)
- fitted by power law
- breakdown for high capitalization
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
13Trades stick together
- At about 1 trade / 20 minutes, transaction size
starts to grow - 3108 USD in capitalization
- Different mechanism for different company sizes?
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
14Beyond averages The distribution of traded value
- the inverse cube half law
- trading volume (Q) or value (f)
- Levy stable
P. Gopikrishnan et al., Phys. Rev. E 62, 4493
(2000)
15Beyond averages The distribution of traded value
- analysis of 1000 top companies using extensions
of Hills method - tail exponent greater than 2
- Gaussian stable
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
16Beyond averages The distribution of traded value
- fat tails
- tail exponent greater than 2
- analysis of 1000 top companies
- increasing effective exponents
- Gaussian stable
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
17Non-universal correlations of traded value (1)
- The measured tail exponents are greater than 2
- standard deviation exists on all time scales
- for a stock i, the Hurst exponent H(i) can be
defined as - persistent H gt 0.5
- uncorrelated H 0.5
18Non-universal correlations of traded value (2)
- Stocks display a crossover
- at ?t 390 min 1 day
- from weaker to stronger correlation
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
19Capitalization dependence
- H non-universal!
- depends on which is closely related
to company size - ?(?t lt 250 min) 0.016 0.001
- ?(?t gt 630 min) 0.063 0.002
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
20Non-universal correlations of traded value (3)
- strongly depends on capitalization
- capitalization acts as a parameter that
determines the strength of correlations present
in trading activity - the effect is weak on an intraday scale
- it is much stronger for day-to-day fluctuations
- a clear logarithmic law only the order of
magnitude matters!
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
21Non-universal correlations of intertrade times
(1)
- intertrade interval time between two consecutive
trades, T(n1nmax) - Hurst exponents in virtual time (n)
- Ivanov et al. (2004) find universally for N
larger than the usual daily nr. of trades - for 30 large companies HT 0.94 0.05
P. Ch. Ivanov et al., Phys Rev. E 69, 56107 (2004)
22- Ivanov et al. (2004) finds universally for N
larger than the usual daily nr. of trades - for 30 large companies HT 0.94 0.05
- on a narrow range of company sizes
non-universality cannot be detected
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
23Non-universal correlations of intertrade times
(2)
- an extended range of companies gives an
approximate logarithmic law, ?T -0.10
0.02 - ?T lt 0 larger companies show, stronger
correlations
GE
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
24Multiscaling distribution of intertrade times (1)
- Ivanov et al. (2004) find universally
- Normalized distribution is independent of stock
(for 30 large companies)
P. Ch. Ivanov et al., Phys Rev. E 69, 56107 (2004)
25Multiscaling distribution of intertrade times (2)
- This implies that the distribution of T should
show gap scaling - with -t(q)q.
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
26- q1,2,4,6,8,12,16
- bottom to top
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
27- q1,2,4,6,8,12,16
- bottom to top
Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
28Parametric multiscaling of intertrade times
- The Legendre transform of t(q)
- multifractal spectrum f(a)
- can be connected to a universal distribution of
intertrade times - Probability that
- is proportional to
29Parametric multiscaling of intertrade times (1)
- We found
- Let us introduce a family of measures
- a company i with N trades Ti(n1N-1)
- where L is the length of the dataset, so that for
all companies
30Parametric multiscaling of intertrade times (2)
- it is easy to show, that
- where t(q)-?(q)
- one can map µ on the new variable a defined as
31- one can map µ on the new variable a defined as
- and assume separability so that
- A saddle point approximation yields
- Legendre transf. ? multifractal spectrum
32- Legendre transf. ? multifractal spectrum
- Or equivalently
q-th moment
33Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size
34Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size
35Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size - Persistence of traded value and intertrade time
increases for times longer than 1 day
36Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size - Persistence of traded value and intertrade time
increases for times longer than 1 day
37Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size - Persistence of traded value and intertrade time
increases for times longer than 1 day - The Hurst exponent of the f-process (T-process)
increases (decreases) logarithmically with ltfgt
(ltTgt)
38Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size - Persistence of traded value and intertrade time
increases for times longer than 1 day - The Hurst exponent of the f-process (T-process)
increases (decreases) logarithmically with ltfgt
(ltTgt)
39Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size - Persistence of traded value and intertrade time
increases for times longer than 1 day - The Hurst exponent of the f-process (T-process)
increases (decreases) logarithmically with ltfgt
(ltTgt) - Distribution of intertrade times shows
multiscaling
40Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size - Persistence of traded value and intertrade time
increases for times longer than 1 day - The Hurst exponent of the f-process (T-process)
increases (decreases) logarithmically with ltfgt
(ltTgt) - Distribution of intertrade times shows
multiscaling
41Summary
- Trades tend to stick together Value/trade
increases with increasing company size - Persistence of traded value and intertrade time
increases for times longer than 1 day - The Hurst exponent of the f-process (T-process)
increases (decreases) logarithmically with ltfgt
(ltTgt) - Distribution of intertrade times shows
multiscaling
- The concept of universality has to be used with
care in finance - Company size/capitalization is a relevant
parameter that influences many observables in a
non-trivial way (non-universality, multiscaling)
42Dont forget Size matters!
1 Z. Eisler, J. Kertész, arXivphysics/0508156
2 P. Ch. Ivanov et al., Phys Rev. E 69, 56107
(2004) 3 G. Zumbach, Quant. Fin. 4, 441-456
(2004) 4 T.C. Halsey et al., Phys. Rev. A 33,
1141-1151 (1986) 5 P. Gopikrishnan et al.,
Physica A 287, 362-373 (2000) 6 P. Gopikrishnan
et al., Phys. Rev. E 62, 4493-4496 (2000) 7
H.E. Stanley, Rev. Mod. Phys. 71, 358 (1999)
- Thank you for your attention!