Network theory and behavioral finance in a heterogeneous market environment
Authored by Khaldoun Khashanah, Talal Alsulaiman
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1002/cplx.21834
Sponsors:
United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
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Abstract
This article addresses the stock market as a complex system. The
complexity of the stock market arises from the structure of the
environment, agent heterogeneity, interactions among agents, and
interactions with market regulators. We develop the idea of a
meta-model, which is a model of models represented in an agent-based
model that allows us to investigate this type of market complexity. The
novelty of this article is the incorporation of various complexities
captured by network theoretical models or induced by investment
behavior. The model considers agents heterogeneous in terms of their
strategies and investment behavior. Four investment strategies are
included in the model: zero-intelligence, fundamental strategy, momentum
(trend followers), and adaptive trading strategy using the artificial
neural network algorithm. In terms of behavior, the agents can be risk
averse or loss occupied with overconfidence or conservative biases. The
agents may interact with each other by sharing market sentiments through
a structured scale-free network. The market regulator controls the
market through various control tools such as the risk-free rate and
taxation. Parameters are calibrated to the S\&P500. The calibration is
implemented using a scatter search heuristic approach. The model is
validated using various stylized facts of stock return patterns such as
excess kurtosis, auto-correlation, and ARCH effect phenomena. Analysis
at the macro and micro level of the market was performed by measuring
the sensitivity of volatility and market capital and investigating the
wealth distributions of the agents. We found that volatility is more
sensitive to the model parameters than to market capital, and thus, the
level of volatility does not affect market capital. In addition, the
findings suggest that the efficient market hypothesis holds at the macro
level but not at the micro level. (c) 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Complexity 21: 530-554, 2016
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