The condition for stationary increments, not scaling,
detemines long time pair autocorrelations. An incorrect
assumption of stationary increments generates spurious
stylized facts, fat tails and a Hurst exponent Hs=1/2, when
the increments are nonstationary, as they are in FX markets.
The nonstationarity arises from systematic uneveness in
noise traders’ behavior. Spurious results arise
mathematically from using a log increment with a ‘sliding
window’. We explain why a hard to beat market demands
martingale dynamics , and martingales with nonlinear
variance generate nonstationary increments. The
nonstationarity is exhibited directly for Euro/Dollar FX
data. We observe that the Hurst exponent Hs generated by
the using the sliding window technique on a time series
plays the same role as does Mandelbrot’s Joseph exponent.
Finally, Mandelbrot originally assumed that the ‘badly
behaved second moment of cotton returns is due to fat tails,
but that nonconvergent behavior is instead direct evidence
for nonstationary increments. Summarizing, the evidence for
scaling and fat tails as the basis for econophysics and
financial economics is provided neither by FX markets nor
by cotton price data