eScholarship Repository eScholarship Repository California Digital Library
eScholarship > ANDERSON > FIN > Paper 2-99

FIN Papers

FIN Website

Policies

Search FIN

Submit a Paper

Notify me of new papers

institute_logo

Anderson Graduate School of Management
Finance
University of California, Los Angeles

FIN Papers  •  FIN Website  •  Policies  •  Search  •  Submit a Paper

Crashes at Critical Points
Anders Johansen, Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics
Olivier Ledoit, Anderson School of Management
Didier Sornette, Department of Earth and Space Sciences; UCLA

Download the Paper (62 K, PDF file) - October 19, 1998 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
We study a rational expectation model of bubbles and crashes. The model has two components: (1) our key assumption is that a crash may be caused by local self-reinforcing imitation between noise traders. If the tendency for noise traders to imitate their nearest neighbors increases up to a certain point called the “critical” point, all noise traders may place the same order (sell) at the same time, thus causing a crash. The interplay between the progressive strengthening of imitation and the ubiquity of noise is characterized by the hazard rate, i.e. the probability per unit time that the crash will happen in the next instant if it has not happened yet. (2) Since the crash is not a certain deterministic out come of the bubble, it remains rational for traders to remain invested provided they are compensated by a higher rate of growth of the bubble for taking the risk of a crash. Our model distinguishes between the end of the bubble and the time of the crash: the rational expectation constraint has the specific implication that the date of the crash must be random. The theoretical death of the bubble is not the time of the crash because the crash could happen at any time before, even though this is not very likely. The death of the bubble is the most probable time for the crash. There also exists a finite probability of the attaining the end of the bubble without crash. Our model has specific predictions about the presence of certain critical log-periodic patterns in pre-crash prices, associated with the deterministic components of the bubble mechanism. We provide empirical evidence showing that these patterns were indeed present before the crashes of 1929, 1962 and 1987 on Wall Street and the 1997 crash on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. These results are compared with the statistical tests on synthetic data.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Anders Johansen, Olivier Ledoit, and Didier Sornette, "Crashes at Critical Points" (October 19, 1998). Finance. Paper 2-99.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/anderson/fin/2-99

PREVIOUS VERSIONS:
Click a date to download that version.
October 19, 1998

 
bar
Open Archives Initiative eScholarship is a service of the California Digital Library bepress