Stylized Facts and Their Microscopic Origins: Clustering, Persistence, and Stability in a 2D Ising Framework
By: Hernán Ezequiel Benítez, Claudio Oscar Dorso
Potential Business Impact:
Explains why stock prices jump and crash.
The analysis of financial markets using models inspired by statistical physics offers a fruitful approach to understand collective and extreme phenomena [3, 14, 15] In this paper, we present a study based on a 2D Ising network model where each spin represents an agent that interacts only with its immediate neighbors plus a term reated to the mean field [1, 2]. From this simple formulation, we analyze the formation of spin clusters, their temporal persistence, and the morphological evolution of the system as a function of temperature [5, 19]. Furthermore, we introduce the study of the quantity $1/2P\sum_{i}|S_{i}(t)+S_{i}(t+Δt)|$, which measures the absolute overlap between consecutive configurations and quantifies the degree of instantaneous correlation between system states. The results show that both the morphology and persistence of the clusters and the dynamics of the absolute sum can explain universal statistical properties observed in financial markets, known as stylized facts [2, 12, 18]: sharp peaks in returns, distributions with heavy tails, and zero autocorrelation. The critical structure of clusters and their reorganization over time thus provide a microscopic mechanism that gives rise to the intermittency and clustered volatility observed in prices [2, 15].
Similar Papers
Phase Transitions in Financial Markets Using the Ising Model: A Statistical Mechanics Perspective
Statistical Finance
Makes stock market patterns predictable with a simple model.
Cluster Formation in Diffusive Systems
Numerical Analysis
Makes tiny things stick together faster.
On zeros and algorithms for disordered systems: mean-field spin glasses
Data Structures and Algorithms
Solves hard math problems for understanding magnets.