Classification of normal and abnormal regimes in financial markets (Q1712061): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 20:45, 19 March 2024
scientific article
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English | Classification of normal and abnormal regimes in financial markets |
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Classification of normal and abnormal regimes in financial markets (English)
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21 January 2019
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Summary: When financial market conditions change, traders adopt different strategies. The traders' collective behaviour may cause significant changes in the statistical properties of price movements. When this happens, the market is said to have gone through ``regime changes''. The purpose of this paper is to characterise what is a ``normal market regime'' as well as what is an ``abnormal market regime'', under observations in Directional Changes (DC). Our study starts with historical data from 10 financial markets. For each market, we focus on a period of time in which significant events could have triggered regime changes. The observations of regime changes in these markets are then positioned in a designed two-dimensional indicator space based on DC. Our results suggest that the normal regimes from different markets share similar statistical characteristics. In other words, with our observations, it is possible to distinguish normal regimes from abnormal regimes. This is significant, because, for the first time, we can tell whether a market is in a normal regime by observing the DC indicators in the market. This opens the door for future work to be able to dynamically monitor the market for regime change.
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regime change
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directional change
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machine learning
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