In the Brownian model, even the largest of N successive daily price increments contributes negligibly to the overall sample variance. The resulting 'absent' concentration justifies the role of variance in measuring Brownian volatility. Mandelbrot introduced in 1963 an alternative 'mesofractal model', in which the population variance is infinite. A significant proportion of the overall sample variance comes from an absolutely small number of large contributions, expressing a 'hard' form of concentration. To achieve a prescribed proportion of the overall measured variance, those 1900 and 1963 models require numbers of days of the order of N1 and N0, respectively. This paper shows that an intermediate possibility exists: a new and very flexibl...
This article describes a versatile family of functions increasingly roughened by successive interpol...
The Multifractal Model of Asset Returns (“MMAR,” see Mandelbrot, Fisher, and Calvet, 1997) proposes ...
This thesis will first criticize standard financial theory. The focus will be on return distribution...
In the Brownian model, even the largest of N successive daily price increments contributes negligibl...
Cowles Foundation Discussion Paper, n° 1164/1997This paper presents the multifractal model of asset ...
The scaling properties of two alternative fractal models recently proposed to characterize the dynam...
This article describes a versatile family of functions that are increasingly roughened by successive...
The scaling properties of financial prices raise many questions. To provide background—appropriately...
This is a direct continuation of the preceding paper, with which it shares the front material and th...
The scaling properties of the multifractional Brownian motion (mBm), a generally not multifractal pr...
The hereto article indicates how multifractals related ideas can contribute to the modelling of the ...
Cowles Foundation Discussion Paper, n° 1166/1997This paper presents the first empirical investigatio...
In the recent years, a new wave of interest spurred the involvement of complexity in finance which m...
This paper presents the results of multifractal testing of two sets of financial data: daily data o...
In this paper, we consider daily financial data of a collection of different stock market indices, e...
This article describes a versatile family of functions increasingly roughened by successive interpol...
The Multifractal Model of Asset Returns (“MMAR,” see Mandelbrot, Fisher, and Calvet, 1997) proposes ...
This thesis will first criticize standard financial theory. The focus will be on return distribution...
In the Brownian model, even the largest of N successive daily price increments contributes negligibl...
Cowles Foundation Discussion Paper, n° 1164/1997This paper presents the multifractal model of asset ...
The scaling properties of two alternative fractal models recently proposed to characterize the dynam...
This article describes a versatile family of functions that are increasingly roughened by successive...
The scaling properties of financial prices raise many questions. To provide background—appropriately...
This is a direct continuation of the preceding paper, with which it shares the front material and th...
The scaling properties of the multifractional Brownian motion (mBm), a generally not multifractal pr...
The hereto article indicates how multifractals related ideas can contribute to the modelling of the ...
Cowles Foundation Discussion Paper, n° 1166/1997This paper presents the first empirical investigatio...
In the recent years, a new wave of interest spurred the involvement of complexity in finance which m...
This paper presents the results of multifractal testing of two sets of financial data: daily data o...
In this paper, we consider daily financial data of a collection of different stock market indices, e...
This article describes a versatile family of functions increasingly roughened by successive interpol...
The Multifractal Model of Asset Returns (“MMAR,” see Mandelbrot, Fisher, and Calvet, 1997) proposes ...
This thesis will first criticize standard financial theory. The focus will be on return distribution...