Speculative trading: the price multiplier effect

Abstract

During a speculative episode the price of an item jumps from an initial level p1 to a peak level p2 before more or less returning to level p1. The ratio p2/p1 is referred to as the amplitude A of the peak. This paper shows that for a given market the peak amplitude is a linear function of the logarithm of the price at the beginning of the speculative episode; with p1 expressed in 1999 euros the relationship takes the form: A=a p1 +b ; the values of the parameter a turn out to be relatively independent of the market considered: a 0.5 , the values of the parameter b are more market-dependent, but are stable in the course of time for a given market. This relationship suggests that the higher the stakes the more "bullish" the market becomes. Possible mechanisms of this "risk affinity" effect are discussed.

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