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Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate in Economics

Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

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Page 1: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate in Economics

Page 2: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

microscopic element = individual investor

interaction=buying / selling of stocks / bonds

Discrete time

investment options:

Riskless: bond; fixed price

return rate r: investing W dollars at time t yields W r at time t+1

Risky: stock / index (SP) / market portfolio

price p(t) determined by investors (as described later )

Page 3: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

Returns on stock

Capital gain / loss

If an investor i holds N i stock shares

a change P t+1 - P t

=> change N(P t - P t-1 ) in his wealth

Dividends Dt per share at time t

Overall rate of return on stock in period t:

H t = (P t - P t-1 + Dt )/ P t-1

Page 4: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

Investors divide their money between the two investment options in the optimal way which maximizes their expected utility E{U[W]} = < ln W >.

To compute the expected future W, they assume that each of the last k returns H j ; j= t, t-1, …., t-k+1

Has an equal probability of 1/k to reoccur in the next time period t.

Page 5: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

INCOME GAIN

N t (i) D t in dividends

and (W t (i)- N t (i) P t ) r

in interest

W t (i)- N t (i) P t is the money held in bonds as W t (i) is the total wealth and N t (i) P t is the wealth held in

stocks

Thus before the trade at time t the wealth of investor i is

W t (i) + N t (i) D t + (W t (i)- N t (i) P t ) r

Page 6: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

Demand Function for stocks

We derive the aggregate demand function for various hypothetical prices Ph and based on it we find Ph = Pt

the equilibrium price at time t

Suppose that at the trade at time t the price of the stock is set at a hypothetical price Ph How many shares will investor i want to hold at this price?

First let us observe that immediately after the trade the wealth of investor i will change by the amount

N t (i) ( Ph - Pt ) due to capital gain or loss

Page 7: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

Note that there is capital gain or loss only on the N t (i) shares held before the trade and not on shares bought or sold at the time t trade

Thus if the hypothetical price is Ph the hypothetical

wealth of investor i after the t trade Ph will be

Wh (i) = W t (i) + N t (i) D t

+ ( W t (i) - N t (i) P t ) r

+ N t (i) ( Ph - Pt )

Page 8: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

The investor has to decide at time t how to invest this wealth He/she will attempt to maximize his/her expected utility at the next period time t

As explained before the expost distribution of returns is employed as an estimate for the exante distribution If investor i invests at time t a proportion X(i) of his/her

wealth in the stock his/her expected utility at time t will be given by

t-k+1

E{U[X(i)]} = 1/k ln[W ]

j=t

W= (1-X(i)) Wh (i) (1+r) +X(i) Wh (i)(1+ Hj ) bonds contribution stocks contribution

Page 9: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

The investor chooses the investment proportion Xh (i) that maximizes his/her expected utility

E{U[X (i)]} / X(i) |X (i)= Xh (i) =0

The amount of wealth that investor i will hold in stocks at

the hypothetical price Ph is given by Xh (i) Wh (i)

Therefore the number of shares that investor i will want to hold at the hypothetical price Ph will be

Nh(i, Ph )= Xh (i) Wh (i) / Ph

Page 10: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

This constitutes the personal demand curve of investor i

Summing the personal demand functions of all investors we obtain the following collective demand function

Nh(Ph )= i Nh(i, Ph )

Page 11: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

Market Clearance

As the number of shares in the market denoted by N is assumed to be fixed the collective demand function Nh(Ph ) = N determines the equilibrium price Ph

Thus the equilibrium price of the stock at time t denoted by Pt will be Ph

Page 12: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate

History Update

The new stock price Pt+1 and dividend Dt+1 give us a

new return on the stock

H t = (P t+1 - P t + Dt+1 )/ P t

We update the stocks history by including this most

recent return and eliminating the oldest return H t-k+1

from the history

This completes one time cycle

By repeating this cycle we simulate the evolution of the stock market through time.

Include bounded rationality: Xh*(i)= Xh(i)+ (i)

Page 13: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 14: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 15: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 16: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 17: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 18: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 19: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 20: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 21: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 22: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 23: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 24: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 25: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 26: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate
Page 27: Levy, Solomon and Levy's Microscopic Simulation of Financial Markets points us towards the future of financial economics." Harry M. Markowitz, Nobel Laureate