By means of a novel version of the Continuous-Time Random Walk (CTRW) model with memory [1], we describe, for instance, the stochastic process of a single share price on a double-auction market within the high frequency time scale. The memory present in the model is understood as dependence between successive share price jumps, while waiting times between price changes are considered as i.i.d. random variables. The range of this memory is defined herein by dependence between three successive jumps of the process. This dependence is motivated both empirically, by analysis of empirical two-point histograms, and theoretically, by analysis of the bid-ask bounce mechanism containing some delay. Our model turns out to be analytically solvable, wh...
We study the effect of drift in pure-jump transaction-level models for asset prices in continuous ti...
Most modern financial markets use a continuous double auction mechanism to store and match orders a...
We investigate the random walk of prices by developing a simple model relating the properties of the...
An extended version of the Continuous-Time Random Walk (CTRW) model with memory is herein developed....
In many physical, social, and economic phenomena, we observe changes in a studied quantity only in d...
In this paper, we are addressing the old problem of long-term nonlinear autocorrelation function ver...
Continuous time random walks (CTRWs) are used in physics to model anomalous diffusion, by incorporat...
In high-frequency financial data not only returns, but also waiting times between consecutive trades...
The continuous-time random walk (CTRW) formalism can be adapted to encompass stochastic processes wi...
We study financial distributions from the perspective of Continuous Time Random Walks with memory. W...
We apply the formalism of the continuous-time random walk to the study of financial data. The entire...
ABSTRACT. Based on the continuous-time random walk (CTRW) formalism for high-frequency financial dat...
Earlier we proposed the stochastic point process model, which reproduces a variety of self-affine ti...
Continuous Time Random Walks (CTRWs) provide stochastic models for the random movement of any entity...
Abstract. In a continuous time random walk (CTRW), a random waiting time precedes each random jump. ...
We study the effect of drift in pure-jump transaction-level models for asset prices in continuous ti...
Most modern financial markets use a continuous double auction mechanism to store and match orders a...
We investigate the random walk of prices by developing a simple model relating the properties of the...
An extended version of the Continuous-Time Random Walk (CTRW) model with memory is herein developed....
In many physical, social, and economic phenomena, we observe changes in a studied quantity only in d...
In this paper, we are addressing the old problem of long-term nonlinear autocorrelation function ver...
Continuous time random walks (CTRWs) are used in physics to model anomalous diffusion, by incorporat...
In high-frequency financial data not only returns, but also waiting times between consecutive trades...
The continuous-time random walk (CTRW) formalism can be adapted to encompass stochastic processes wi...
We study financial distributions from the perspective of Continuous Time Random Walks with memory. W...
We apply the formalism of the continuous-time random walk to the study of financial data. The entire...
ABSTRACT. Based on the continuous-time random walk (CTRW) formalism for high-frequency financial dat...
Earlier we proposed the stochastic point process model, which reproduces a variety of self-affine ti...
Continuous Time Random Walks (CTRWs) provide stochastic models for the random movement of any entity...
Abstract. In a continuous time random walk (CTRW), a random waiting time precedes each random jump. ...
We study the effect of drift in pure-jump transaction-level models for asset prices in continuous ti...
Most modern financial markets use a continuous double auction mechanism to store and match orders a...
We investigate the random walk of prices by developing a simple model relating the properties of the...