2,177 research outputs found
Financial ``Anti-Bubbles'': Log-Periodicity in Gold and Nikkei collapses
We propose that imitation between traders and their herding behaviour not
only lead to speculative bubbles with accelerating over-valuations of financial
markets possibly followed by crashes, but also to ``anti-bubbles'' with
decelerating market devaluations following all-time highs. For this, we propose
a simple market dynamics model in which the demand decreases slowly with
barriers that progressively quench in, leading to a power law decay of the
market price decorated by decelerating log-periodic oscillations. We document
this behaviour on the Japanese Nikkei stock index from 1990 to present and on
the Gold future prices after 1980, both after their all-time highs. We perform
simultaneously a parametric and non-parametric analysis that are fully
consistent with each other. We extend the parametric approach to the next order
of perturbation, comparing the log-periodic fits with one, two and three
log-frequencies, the latter one providing a prediction for the general trend in
the coming years. The non-parametric power spectrum analysis shows the
existence of log-periodicity with high statistical significance, with a
prefered scale ratio of for the Nikkei index for the Gold future prices, comparable to the values obtained for
speculative bubbles leading to crashes.Comment: 14 pages with 4 figure
Testing for rational speculative bubbles in the Brazilian residential real-estate market
Speculative bubbles have been occurring periodically in local or global real
estate markets and are considered a potential cause of economic crises. In this
context, the detection of explosive behaviors in the financial market and the
implementation of early warning diagnosis tests are of critical importance. The
recent increase in Brazilian housing prices has risen concerns that the
Brazilian economy may have a speculative housing bubble. In the present paper,
we employ a recently proposed recursive unit root test in order to identify
possible speculative bubbles in data from the Brazilian residential real-estate
market. The empirical results show evidence for speculative price bubbles both
in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo, the two main Brazilian cities
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The long-term price-earnings ratio
price-earnings ratio;value premium;arbitrage trading rule;UK stock returns;contrarian investment
Abstract: The price-earnings effect has been thoroughly documented and is the subject of numerous academic studies. However, in existing research it has almost exclusively been calculated on the basis of the previous year's earnings. We show that the power of the effect has until now been seriously underestimated due to taking too short-term a view of earnings. Looking at all UK companies since 1975, using the traditional P/E ratio we find the difference in average annual returns between the value and glamour deciles to be 6%. This is similar to other authors' findings. We are able to almost double the value premium by calculating the P/E ratio using earnings averaged over the previous eight years
House price Keynesianism and the contradictions of the modern investor subject
This article conceptualises the marked downturn in UK house prices in the 2007-2009 period in relation to longer-term processes of national economic restructuring centred on a new model of homeownership. The structure of UK house prices has been impacted markedly by the Labour Government‟s efforts to ingrain a particular notion of financial literacy amid the move towards an increasingly asset-based system of welfare. New model welfare recipients and new model homeowners have thereby been co-constituted in a manner consistent with a new UK growth regime of „house price Keynesianism‟. However, the investor subjects who drive such growth are necessarily rendered uncertain as compared with the idealised image of Government policy because of their reliance on the credit-creating decisions of private financial institutions. The recent steep decline in UK house prices is explained here as an epiphenomenon of the disruptive effect on the idealised image caused by the dependence of investor subjects on pricing dynamics not of their making
Theory of Fano-Kondo effect of transport properties through quantum dots
The Fano-Kondo effect in zero-bias conductance is investigated based on a
theoretical model for the T-shaped quantum dot. The conductance as a function
of the gate voltage is generally characterized by a Fano asymmetric parameter
q. With varying temperature the conductance shows a crossover between the high
and low temperature regions compared with the Kondo temperature T_K: two Fano
asymmetric peaks at high temperatures and the Fano-Kondo plateau inside a Fano
peak at low temperatures. Temperature dependence of conductance is calculated
numerically by the Finite temperature density matrix renormalization group
method (FT-DMRG).Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
Value at Risk models with long memory features and their economic performance
We study alternative dynamics for Value at Risk (VaR) that incorporate a slow moving component and information on recent aggregate returns in established quantile (auto) regression models. These models are compared on their economic performance, and also on metrics of first-order importance such as violation ratios. By better economic performance, we mean that changes in the VaR forecasts should have a lower variance to reduce transaction costs and should lead to lower exceedance sizes without raising the average level of the VaR. We find that, in combination with a targeted estimation strategy, our proposed models lead to improved performance in both statistical and economic terms
Constituting monetary conservatives via the 'savings habit': New Labour and the British housing market bubble
The ongoing world credit crunch might well kill off the most recent bubble dynamics in the British housing market by driving prices systematically downwards from their 2007 peak. Nonetheless, the experience of that bubble still warrants analytical attention. The Labour Government might not have been responsible for consciously creating it, but it has certainly grasped the opportunities the bubble has provided in an attempt to enforce a process of agential change at the heart of the British economy. The key issue in this respect is the way in which the Government has challenged the legitimacy of passive welfare receipts in favour of establishing a welfare system based on incorporating the individual into an active asset-holding society. The housing market has taken on new political significance as a means for individuals first to acquire assets and then to accumulate wealth on the back of asset ownership. The ensuing integration of the housing market into an increasingly reconfigured welfare system has permeated into the politics of everyday life. It has been consistent with individuals remaking their political subjectivities in line with preferences for the type of conservative monetary policies that typically keep house price bubbles inflated
Implications of return predictability for consumption dynamics and asset pricing
Two broad classes of consumption dynamics—long-run risks and rare disasters—have proven successful in explaining the equity premium puzzle when used in conjunction with recursive preferences. We show that bounds a-là Gallant, Hansen, and Tauchen that restrict the volatility of the stochastic discount factor by conditioning on a set of return predictors constitute a useful tool to discriminate between these alternative dynamics. In particular, we document that models that rely on rare disasters meet comfortably the bounds independently of the forecasting horizon and the asset returns used to construct the bounds. However, the specific nature of disasters is a relevant characteristic at the 1-year horizon: disasters that unfold over multiple years are more successful in meeting the predictors-based bounds than one-period disasters. Instead, at the 5-year horizon, the sole presence of disasters—even if one-period and permanent—is sufficient for the model to satisfy the bounds. Finally, the bounds point to multiple volatility components in consumption as a promising dimension for long-run risk models
Sand in the wheels, or oiling the wheels, of international finance? : New Labour's appeal to a 'new Bretton Woods'
Tony Blair’s political instinct typically is to associate himself only with the future. As such, his explicit appeal to ‘the past’ in his references to New Labour’s desire to establish a “new Bretton Woods” is sufficient in itself to arouse some degree of analytical curiosity (see Blair 1998a). The fact that this appeal was made specifically in relation to Bretton Woods is even more interesting. The resonant image of the international economic context established by the original Bretton Woods agreements invokes a style and content of policy-making which Tony Blair typically dismisses as neither economically nor politically consistent with his preferred vision of the future (see Blair 2000c, 2001b)
An intermediate-depth source of hydrothermal 3He and dissolved iron in the North Pacific
We observed large water column anomalies in helium isotopes and trace metal concentrations above the Loihi Seamount. The 3He/4He of the added helium was 27.3 times the atmospheric ratio, clearly marking its origin to a primitive mantle plume. The dissolved iron to 3He ratio (dFe:3He) exported to surrounding waters was 9.3 ± 0.3 × 106. We observed the Loihi 3He and dFe “signal” at a depth of 1100 m at several stations within ∼100 – 1000 km of Loihi, which exhibited a distal dFe:3He ratio of ∼4 × 106, about half the proximal ratio. These ratios were remarkably similar to those observed over and near the Southern East Pacific Rise (SEPR) despite greatly contrasting geochemical and volcanictectonic origins. In contrast, the proximal and distal dMn:3He ratios were both ∼ 1 × 106, less than half of that observed at the SEPR. Dissolved methane was minimally enriched in waters above Loihi Seamount and was distally absent. Using an idealized regional-scale model we replicated the historically observed regional 3He distribution, requiring a hydrothermal 3He source from Loihi of 10.4 ± 4.2 mola−1, ∼2% of the global abyssal hydrothermal 3He flux. From this we compute a corresponding dFe flux of ∼40 Mmola−1. Global circulation model simulations suggest that the Loihi-influenced waters eventually upwell along the west coast of North America, also extending into the shallow northwest Pacific, making it a possibly important determinant of marine primary production in the subpolar North Pacific
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