The volume traded daily for 17 stocks is followed over a period of about half a century. We look at the volume of stocks traded in a certain time interval (day, week, month) and analyze how long that traded volume keeps monotonically increasing or decreasing. On all three times scales we find that the sequence of traded volumes behaves neither like a sequence of independent and identically distributed variables, nor like a Markov sequence. A compressed exponential survival function with the same parameters at all timescales is firmly established. A day with an increase (decrease) of traded volume is most likely followed by a day with a decrease (increase) of traded volume. We show how the apparent self-similarity results because the ...
In this article we analyse linear correlation and non-linear dependence of traded volume, $v$, of th...
We investigate the correlation properties of transaction data from the New York Stock Exchange. The ...
In this thesis, we analyze and explain various properties of stock price changes. The change of a st...
The volume traded daily for 17 stocks is followed over a period of about half a century. W...
This paper investigates the relationship between stock market trading volume and the autocorrelation...
We conclude from a careful analysis of high resolution NYSE data that, contrary to previous argument...
The scaling behaviour of both log-price and volume is analyzed for three stock indexes. The traditio...
The main goal of this paper is to gain insights into the dependence structure between the duration a...
In finance, one usually deals not with prices but with growth rates R, defined as the difference in ...
Assuming that the variance of daily price changes and trading volume are both driven by the same lat...
We examine the dynamic relation between return and volume of individual stocks. Using a simple model...
AbstractWidely cited evidence for scaling (self-similarity) of the returns of stocks and other secur...
Assuming that the variance of daily price changes and trading volume are both driven by the same lat...
Self-similarity is implicit in the standard modeling of financial markets, when a Brownian motion or...
We measure the influence of different time-scales on the intraday dynamics of financial markets. Thi...
In this article we analyse linear correlation and non-linear dependence of traded volume, $v$, of th...
We investigate the correlation properties of transaction data from the New York Stock Exchange. The ...
In this thesis, we analyze and explain various properties of stock price changes. The change of a st...
The volume traded daily for 17 stocks is followed over a period of about half a century. W...
This paper investigates the relationship between stock market trading volume and the autocorrelation...
We conclude from a careful analysis of high resolution NYSE data that, contrary to previous argument...
The scaling behaviour of both log-price and volume is analyzed for three stock indexes. The traditio...
The main goal of this paper is to gain insights into the dependence structure between the duration a...
In finance, one usually deals not with prices but with growth rates R, defined as the difference in ...
Assuming that the variance of daily price changes and trading volume are both driven by the same lat...
We examine the dynamic relation between return and volume of individual stocks. Using a simple model...
AbstractWidely cited evidence for scaling (self-similarity) of the returns of stocks and other secur...
Assuming that the variance of daily price changes and trading volume are both driven by the same lat...
Self-similarity is implicit in the standard modeling of financial markets, when a Brownian motion or...
We measure the influence of different time-scales on the intraday dynamics of financial markets. Thi...
In this article we analyse linear correlation and non-linear dependence of traded volume, $v$, of th...
We investigate the correlation properties of transaction data from the New York Stock Exchange. The ...
In this thesis, we analyze and explain various properties of stock price changes. The change of a st...