scholarly journals Estimating a Structural Model of Herd Behavior in Financial Markets

Author(s):  
Marco Cipriani ◽  
Antonio Guarino
2014 ◽  
Vol 104 (1) ◽  
pp. 224-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Cipriani ◽  
Antonio Guarino

We develop a new methodology to estimate herd behavior in financial markets. We build a model of informational herding that can be estimated with financial transaction data. In the model, rational herding arises because of information-event uncertainty. We estimate the model using data on a NYSE stock (Ashland Inc.) during 1995. Herding occurs often and is particularly pervasive on some days. On average, the proportion of herd buyers is 2 percent; that of herd sellers is 4 percent. Herding also causes important informational inefficiencies in the market, amounting, on average, to 4 percent of the asset's expected value. (JEL C58, D82, D83, G12, G14)


2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (288) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Guarino ◽  
Marco Cipriani ◽  
◽  

2022 ◽  
Vol 59 ◽  
pp. 101506
Author(s):  
Enkhbayar Choijil ◽  
Christian Espinosa Méndez ◽  
Wing-Keung Wong ◽  
João Paulo Vieito ◽  
Munkh-Ulzii Batmunkh

2019 ◽  
Vol 55 (6) ◽  
pp. 2037-2072
Author(s):  
Massimo Massa ◽  
David Schumacher

We study the link between information barriers in global markets and the organizational form of asset management. Fund families outsource funds in which they are at an informational disadvantage to generate performance. Using a structural model of self-selection, we endogenize the outsourcing decision and estimate positive gains from outsourcing of 4–14 basis points per month, thereby reconciling underperformance of outsourced funds with performance maximization by fund families. The gains from outsourcing provide a novel proxy for the information barriers that segment global financial markets: The more segmented the underlying markets where the funds invest, the larger the gains from outsourcing.


2006 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 502-528 ◽  
Author(s):  
GIAN-ITALO BISCHI ◽  
MAURO GALLEGATI ◽  
LAURA GARDINI ◽  
ROBERTO LEOMBRUNI ◽  
ANTONIO PALESTRINI

In this paper we investigate the effects of herding on asset price dynamics during continuous trading. We focus on the role of interaction among traders, and we investigate the dynamics emerging when we allow for a tendency to mimic the actions of other investors, that is, to engage in herd behavior. The model, built as amean fieldin a binary setting (buy/sell decisions of a risky asset), is expressed by a three-dimensional discrete dynamical system describing the evolution of the asset price, its expected price, and its excess demand. We show that such dynamical system can be reduced to a unidirectionally coupled system. In line with therational herd behaviorliterature [Bikhchandani, S., Sharma, S. (2000), Herd Behavior in Financial Markets: A Review. Working paper, IMF, WP/00/48], situations of multistability are observed, characterized by strongpath dependence; that is, the dynamics of the system are strongly influenced by historical accidents. We describe the different kinds of dynamic behavior observed, and we characterize the bifurcations that mark the transitions between qualitatively different time evolutions. Some situations give rise to high sensitivity with respect to small changes of the parameters and/or initial conditions, including the possibility ofinvest or reject cascades(i.e., sudden uncontrolled increases or crashes of the prices).


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