Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Journal Article

Stochastic Behavioral Asset Pricing Models and the Stylized Facts

Authors

  • Lux
  • T.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

C15 D84 G12

Key Words

agent-based models

group dynamics

speculation

stylized facts

High-frequency financial data are characterized by a set of ubiquitous statistical properties that prevail with surprising uniformity. While these 'stylized facts' have been well-known for decades, attempts at their behavioral explanation have remained scarce. However, recently a new branch of simple stochastic models of interacting traders have been proposed that share many of the salient features of empirical data. These models draw some of their inspiration from the broader current of behavioral finance. However, their design is closer in spirit to models of multi-particle interaction in physics than to traditional asset-pricing models. This reflects a basic insight in the natural sciences that similar regularities like those observed in financial markets (denoted as 'scaling laws' in physics) can often be explained via the microscopic interactions of the constituent parts of a complex system. Since these emergent properties should be independent of the microscopic details of the system, this viewpoint advocates negligence of the details of the determination of individuals' market behavior and instead focuses on the study of a few plausible rules of behavior and the emergence of macroscopic statistical regularities in a market with a large ensemble of traders. This chapter will review the philosophy of this new approach, its various implementations, and its contribution to an explanation of the stylized facts in finance.

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • Production site fully automatic with robot arms

    Economic Outlook

  • Inside shoot of the cupola of the Reichstag, the building of the German Bundestag.

    Economic Policy in Germany

  • Colorful flags of European countires in front of an official EU building.

    Tension within the European Union

Research Center

  • Macroeconomics