Market Polarization in Presence of Individual Choice Volatility
Sitabhra Sinha () and
Srinivas Raghavendra ()
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Sitabhra Sinha: The Institute of Mathematical Sciences
Srinivas Raghavendra: National University of Ireland
Chapter 13 in Advances in Artificial Economics, 2006, pp 177-190 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract Financial markets are subject to long periods of polarized behavior, such as bull-market or bear-market phases, in which the vast majority of market participants seem to almost exclusively choose one action (between buying or selling) over the other. From the point of view of conventional economic theory, such events are thought to reflect the arrival of “external news” that justifies the observed behavior. However, empirical observations of the events leading up to such market phases, as well events occurring during the lifetime of such a phase, have often failed to find significant correlation between news from outside the market and the behavior of the agents comprising the market. In this paper, we explore the alternative hypothesis that the occurrence of such market polarizations are due to interactions amongst the agents in the market, and not due to any influence external to it. In particular, we present a model where the market (i.e., the aggregate behavior of all the agents) is observed to become polarized even though individual agents regularly change their actions (buy or sell) on a time-scale much shorter than that of the market polarization phase.
Keywords: Collective Action; Learning Rate; Adaptation Rate; Excess Demand; Market Behavior (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2006
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:lnechp:978-3-540-37249-3_13
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DOI: 10.1007/3-540-37249-0_13
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