3,275 research outputs found
The conundrum of stock versus bond prices
In a general way, stock and bond prices do not display any significant
correlation. Yet, if we concentrate our attention on specific episodes marked
by a crash followed by a rebound, then we observe that stock prices have a
strong connection with interest rates on the one hand, and with bond yield
spreads on the other hand. That second relationship is particularly stable in
the course of time having been observed for over 140 years. Throughout the
paper we use a quasi-experimental approach. By observing how markets respond to
well-defined exogenous shocks (such as the shock of September 11, 2001) we are
able to determine how investors organize their ``flight to safety'': which safe
haven they select, how long their collective panic lasts, and so on. As
rebounds come to an end the correlation of stock and bond prices fades away, a
clear sign that the collective behavior of investors loses some of its
coherence; this observation can be used as an objective criterion for assessing
the end of a market rebound. Based on the behavior of investors, we introduce a
distinction between ``genuine stock market rallies'', as opposed to spurious
rallies such as those brought about by the buyback programs implemented by
large companies. The paper ends with a discussion of testable predictions.Comment: 19 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables. To appear in "Physica A
Does the price multiplier effect also hold for stocks?
The price multiplier effect provides precious insight into the behavior of
investors during episodes of speculative trading. It tells us that the higher
the price of an asset is (within a set of similar assets) the more its price is
likely to increase during the upgoing phase of a speculative price peak. In
short, instead of being risk averse, as is often assumed, investors rather seem
to be ``risk prone''. While this effect is known to hold for several sorts of
assets, it has not yet been possible to test it for stocks because the price of
one share has no intrinsic significance which means that one cannot say that a
stock is more expensive than a stock on the basis of its price. In
this paper we show that the price-dividend ratio gives a good basis for
assessing the price of stocks in an intrinsic way. When this alternative
measure is used instead, it turns out that the price multiplier effect also
holds for stocks, at least if one concentrates on samples of companies which
are sufficiently homogeneous.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 1 table To appear in the "International Journal
of Modern Physics C
Derivation of the Gutenberg-Richter Empirical Formula from the Solution of the Generalized Logistic Equation
We have written a new equation to study the statistics of earthquake
distributions. We call this equation "the generalized logistic equation". The
Gutenberg-Richter frequency-magnitude formula was derived from the solution of
the generalized logistic equation as an asymptotic case in approximation of
large magnitudes. To illustrate how the found solution of the generalized
logistic equation works, it was used to approximate the observed cumulative
distribution of earthquakes in four different geological provinces: the Central
Atlantic (40N-25N, 5W-35W), Canary Islands, Magellan Mountains (20N-9S,
148E-170E), and the Sea of Japan. This approximation showed the excellent fit
between the theoretical curves and observed data for earthquake magnitudes
1<m<9.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, 8 references. Submitted to Natural
Science, Earthquakes special issu
On the superfluidity of classical liquid in nanotubes
In 2001, the author proposed the ultra second quantization method. The ultra
second quantization of the Schr\"odinger equation, as well as its ordinary
second quantization, is a representation of the N-particle Schr\"odinger
equation, and this means that basically the ultra second quantization of the
equation is the same as the original N-particle equation: they coincide in
3N-dimensional space.
We consider a short action pairwise potential V(x_i -x_j). This means that as
the number of particles tends to infinity, , interaction is
possible for only a finite number of particles. Therefore, the potential
depends on N in the following way: . If V(y) is finite
with support , then as the support engulfs a finite
number of particles, and this number does not depend on N.
As a result, it turns out that the superfluidity occurs for velocities less
than , where
is the critical Landau velocity and R is the radius of
the nanotube.Comment: Latex, 20p. The text is presented for the International Workshop
"Idempotent and tropical mathematics and problems of mathematical physics",
Independent University of Moscow, Moscow, August 25--30, 2007 and to be
published in the Russian Journal of Mathematical Physics, 2007, vol. 15, #
Probability Theory Compatible with the New Conception of Modern Thermodynamics. Economics and Crisis of Debts
We show that G\"odel's negative results concerning arithmetic, which date
back to the 1930s, and the ancient "sand pile" paradox (known also as "sorites
paradox") pose the questions of the use of fuzzy sets and of the effect of a
measuring device on the experiment. The consideration of these facts led, in
thermodynamics, to a new one-parameter family of ideal gases. In turn, this
leads to a new approach to probability theory (including the new notion of
independent events). As applied to economics, this gives the correction, based
on Friedman's rule, to Irving Fisher's "Main Law of Economics" and enables us
to consider the theory of debt crisis.Comment: 48p., 14 figs., 82 refs.; more precise mathematical explanations are
added. arXiv admin note: significant text overlap with arXiv:1111.610
Application of Permutation Group Theory in Reversible Logic Synthesis
The paper discusses various applications of permutation group theory in the
synthesis of reversible logic circuits consisting of Toffoli gates with
negative control lines. An asymptotically optimal synthesis algorithm for
circuits consisting of gates from the NCT library is described. An algorithm
for gate complexity reduction, based on equivalent replacements of gates
compositions, is introduced. A new approach for combining a group-theory-based
synthesis algorithm with a Reed-Muller-spectra-based synthesis algorithm is
described. Experimental results are presented to show that the proposed
synthesis techniques allow a reduction in input lines count, gate complexity or
quantum cost of reversible circuits for various benchmark functions.Comment: In English, 15 pages, 2 figures, 7 tables. Proceeding of the RC 2016
conferenc
Expansion Around the Mean-Field Solution of the Bak-Sneppen Model
We study a recently proposed equation for the avalanche distribution in the
Bak-Sneppen model. We demonstrate that this equation indirectly relates
,the exponent for the power law distribution of avalanche sizes, to ,
the fractal dimension of an avalanche cluster.We compute this relation
numerically and approximate it analytically up to the second order of expansion
around the mean field exponents. Our results are consistent with Monte Carlo
simulations of Bak-Sneppen model in one and two dimensions.Comment: 5 pages, 2 ps-figures iclude
- …