We discuss recent results concerning statistical regularities in the return intervals of volatility in financial markets. In particular, we show how the analysis of volatility return intervals, defined as the time between two volatilities larger than a given threshold, can help to get a better understanding of the behavior of financial time series. We find scaling in the distribution of return intervals for thresholds ranging over a factor of 25, from 0.6 to 15 standard deviations, and also for various time windows from one minute up to 390 min (an entire trading day). Moreover, these results are universal for different stocks, commodities, interest rates as well as currencies. We also analyze the memory in the return intervals which relate...
Financial time series analysis is a highly empirical discipline concerned with the evolution of the...
The stock market volatility in 2015 has caused serious damage to investors and the market has also s...
Estimating volatility from recent high frequency data, we revisit the question of the smoothness of ...
We study the return interval $\tau$ between price volatilities that are above a certain threshold $q...
We investigate scaling and memory effects in return intervals between price volatilities above a cer...
We analyze the S&P 500 index data for the 13-year period, from January 1, 1984 to December 31, 1996,...
We analyze the S&P 500 index data for the 13-year period, from January 1, 1984 to December 31, 1996,...
This paper provides new empirical evidence for intraday scaling behavior of stock market returns uti...
We develop a nonparametric test for whether return volatility exhibits time-varying intraday periodi...
In this paper, we attempt to give an algorithmic explanation to volatility clustering, one of the mo...
This thesis will first criticize standard financial theory. The focus will be on return distribution...
This paper presents probability distributions for price and returns random processes for averaging t...
The objective of research in this chapter is to demonstrate the implications for scaling financial ...
Extreme times techniques, generally applied to nonequilibrium statistical mechanical processes, are ...
We investigate the probability distribution of the return intervals $\tau $ between successive 1-mi...
Financial time series analysis is a highly empirical discipline concerned with the evolution of the...
The stock market volatility in 2015 has caused serious damage to investors and the market has also s...
Estimating volatility from recent high frequency data, we revisit the question of the smoothness of ...
We study the return interval $\tau$ between price volatilities that are above a certain threshold $q...
We investigate scaling and memory effects in return intervals between price volatilities above a cer...
We analyze the S&P 500 index data for the 13-year period, from January 1, 1984 to December 31, 1996,...
We analyze the S&P 500 index data for the 13-year period, from January 1, 1984 to December 31, 1996,...
This paper provides new empirical evidence for intraday scaling behavior of stock market returns uti...
We develop a nonparametric test for whether return volatility exhibits time-varying intraday periodi...
In this paper, we attempt to give an algorithmic explanation to volatility clustering, one of the mo...
This thesis will first criticize standard financial theory. The focus will be on return distribution...
This paper presents probability distributions for price and returns random processes for averaging t...
The objective of research in this chapter is to demonstrate the implications for scaling financial ...
Extreme times techniques, generally applied to nonequilibrium statistical mechanical processes, are ...
We investigate the probability distribution of the return intervals $\tau $ between successive 1-mi...
Financial time series analysis is a highly empirical discipline concerned with the evolution of the...
The stock market volatility in 2015 has caused serious damage to investors and the market has also s...
Estimating volatility from recent high frequency data, we revisit the question of the smoothness of ...