Behaviour
Behaviour
Behaviour
Herd behaviour is in
part inherited, safety
in numbers, reliable
peers, and in part
learnt possibly by
imitation).
Herd behaviour is
good and herd
behaviour is bad.
Herding Basics and
Migrating Flocks
Herd behavior describes how individuals in a
group can act together without planned direction.
The term pertains to the behavior of animals in
herds, flocks and schools, and to human conduct
during activities such as stock market bubbles and
crashes, street demonstrations, sporting events,
religious gatherings, episodes of mob violence
and even everyday decision making, judgment
and opinion forming.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herd_behavio
Herding Basics and Migrating
Flocks
Collective aggregation behaviour is a
ubiquitous biological phenomenon
[….]The most established candidates for
stimuli driving its evolution are foraging
efficiency [….] and reducing predation
risk.
Andrew J. Wood and Graeme J. Ackland. (2007 ). Evolving the selfish herd: emergence of distinct aggregating
strategies in an individual-based model. Proc. R. Soc. B , Vol. 274, pp 1637–1642
Herding Basics
http://www.investopedia.com/university/behavioral_finance/behavioral8.asp
Herding Basics:
Public & Private Information
In an experiment with 7 traders, Cipriani and Guarino conducted
a trading experiment where the participants actually traded with
‘real’ money. There was evidence of herd behaviour in their
experiment:
Decision Percentage
Following Private Information 45.7%
Partially Following Private information 19.6%
Cascade Trading 19.0%
Cascade No-Trading 12.3%
Errors 3.4%
Total 100%
Marco Cipriani and Antonio Guarino (2008). Herd Behavior in Financial Markets: An Experiment with Financial Market
Professionals. IMF Working Paper WP/08/141. (http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/2008/wp08141.pdf)
Herding Basics:
Incentives and Reputational Herding
In a study of the performance of 2345 hedge funds, and their
managers, between 1994-2004, Nicole Boyson found:
Boyson, Nicole. M (2010). Implicit incentives and reputational herding by hedge fund managers. Journal
of Empirical Finance. Vol. 17, pp 283-299
Herding Basics:
Crossing continents
“Foreign investors” bring investment as well as volatility
Zhiyong Dong, Qingyang Gu, and Xu Han (2010). Ambiguity aversion and rational
herd behaviour. Applied Financial Economics, Vol. 20,pp 331–343
Herding Basics: A model
The simplest model of herding is probably the following. There are two possible
states and the agents’ decision consists of either investing or refraining from
investing.
In the good state the investment yields a positive return and in the bad state it yields zero.
Each agent gets an informative signal about the true state, and the signals are i.i.d. The cost
of investment is one half of the return in the good state, and the prior probability of the good
state is one half. This means that the agents are indifferent between investing and refraining
when they have but the prior information. If they get a good signal they strictly prefer to
invest and if they get a bad signal they strictly prefer to refrain.
More generally, if an agent, by observing the actions of his predecessors, can infer
that the number of good signals is greater than the number of bad signals he
prefers to invest. In the opposite case he prefers to refrain.
Klaus K. Kultti and Paavo A. Miettinen(2010). Herding with Costly Observation. The B.E. Journal of Theoretical
Economics, Vol. 7 [2007], Iss. 1 (Topics), Art. 28
Herding Basics:
Out of one market frying pan into another’s fire: Gold
Herding: A Causality
Haiss, Peter. (2010). Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis. The IUP
Journal of Behavioral Finance, Vol. 7 (Nos.1&2) pp31-58.
Herding Basics
Zhiyong Dong, Qingyang Gu, and Xu Han (2010). Ambiguity aversion and rational
herd behaviour. Applied Financial Economics, Vol. 20,pp 331–343
Behaviour and Financial Markets
– The Euphoria
The volume of trading in financial and commodity markets,
and the sometimes the less than transparent relationship
between investors’ demands and traditional metric of asset
prices, is perhaps is related to those ‘who trade despite
having no new information to impound on stock prices’
(Forbes 2009:119).
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding Basics:
Evergrowing Equity Markets
The New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE) is a stock
exchange located at 11 Wall
Street in Lower Manhattan,
New York City, USA. It is by
far the world's largest stock
exchange by market
capitalization of its listed
companies at US$13.39
trillion as of Dec 2010.
1000000000
Volume
Volume
Variance
100000000
10000000
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
Herding Basics:
Evergrowing Equity Markets
Herding Basics:
Evergrowing Equity Markets
Distribution of NYSE Traded Volume around annual mean (1999-2009); 5043 data points
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
-6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
http://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/2011/06/28/banks-trade-food-as-world-goes-hungry/
Herding Herds Shreds Commodity
Markets
Contagion effect and the integration of commodity markets
• commodity markets [...] are more and more integrated, raising the fear
of systemic risk.
•This question has been investigated through different ways. The first is
the study of the impact of traders on derivative markets through the such-
called “herding phenomenon”. The second is the study of spatial and
temporal integration
http://basepub.dauphine.fr/bitstream/handle/123456789/1227/Energy%20finance.pdf?sequence=1
Herding Herds Shred Commodity
Markets
http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/2011/02/02/why-cattle-markets-are-having-a-cow/
Herding Herds Shred Commodity
Markets
Financial Investment in Commodity Markets: Potential Impact on Commodity Prices & Volatility:I IF Commodities Task Force
Submission to the G20. Institute of International Finance., 2011
Noise, noisy traders and herding?
• Technology that provides ways and means of accessing markets that were
hitherto unavailable only a few years ago electronic trading, algo-sniffing;
agencement – an endless network of traders, machines, investors leading to
opaque markets
Assume that there are two kinds of traders only in a market: informed traders and noise traders. The noise trader fails to
ascertain the true value of an asset and relies on guesswork, heuristics, imitation of the informed trader, or prayer. The
noise trader misprices and the informed trader should see this as an opportunity to create a margin through arbitrage.
This arbitrage is not always possible and worse still the informed tries to follow the noise trader.
Noise
According to the authors, ‘the unpredictability of noise traders’ beliefs creates a risk
in the price of the asset that deters rational arbitrageurs from aggressively betting
against them.’
DeLong, B., A. Shleifer, L. Summers and R.Waldman (1990). Noise trader risk in financial markets. Journal of Political
Economy. Vol 98, pp 703-38.
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding as a contingency
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding as a contingency
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding as a contingency
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding as a contingency
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding as a contingency
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding as a contingency
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding as a contingency
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding as a contingency
Constant λ is
the informed
trader’s risk
aversion factor;
ρ changing
value of noise
trader’s
mispricing of an
asset
Forbes, William. (2009). Behavioural Finance. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.
Herding in Financial Markets
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP
Journal of Behavioral Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Economics, Finance and Behaviour
1. Rational Herding
This includes information cascades: prior investment
analyst choices influence post choices small bank
operative follow large bank operative into sub-prime
and risky loans Information asymmetries cause
cascading.
1. Rational Herding
Compensation: Investment managers are remunerated on the
return performance of other managers […] rather than on
absolute performance. This may lead to herd behaviour as
investment managers merely follow other investment managers.
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP Journal of Behavioral
Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Economics, Finance and Behaviour
Behavioral herding
Dependence of behaviour upon the observed behaviour
of others, or the results of behaviour;
Imitation
Responding to affect
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP Journal of Behavioral
Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Herding in Markets
Zhiyong Dong, Qingyang Gu, and Xu Han (2010). Ambiguity aversion and rational
herd behaviour. Applied Financial Economics, Vol. 20,pp 331–343
A Typology of Herding?
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP
Journal of Behavioral Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Economics, Finance and Behaviour
Boyson, Nicole. M (2010). Implicit incentives and reputational herding by hedge fund managers. Journal
of Empirical Finance. Vol. 17, pp 283-299
Herding in Audit Committees
Narasimhan Jegadeesh and Woojin Kim (2010) Do Analysts Herd? An Analysis of Recommendations and Market Reactions. The
Review of Financial Studies Vol. 23 (No.2). pp 902-937.
Analyst-led Herding:
Forecasts and Recommendations
Period 1983-2005
Firms followed 5714
Analysts followed 6588
Brokerages 444
Mean analysts/brokerage 19.27
Mean analysts following each firm 7.45
Narasimhan Jegadeesh and Woojin Kim (2010) Do Analysts Herd? An Analysis of Recommendations and Market Reactions. The
Review of Financial Studies Vol. 23 (No.2). pp 902-937.
Analyst-led Herding:
Forecasts and Recommendations
0 1 2 21 42 126
Narasimhan Jegadeesh and Woojin Kim (2010) Do Analysts Herd? An Analysis of Recommendations and Market Reactions. The
Review of Financial Studies Vol. 23 (No.2). pp 902-937.
Analyst-led Herding:
Forecasts and Recommendations
0 1 2 21 42 126
Narasimhan Jegadeesh and Woojin Kim (2010) Do Analysts Herd? An Analysis of Recommendations and Market Reactions. The
Review of Financial Studies Vol. 23 (No.2). pp 902-937.
Herding amongst Central Bankers
Berger and Woitek (2005) have noted that, for example, in setting
the key discount rate ‘political background of [the Council]
member matters’. More importantly for us: ‘there is some herd
behaviour: the dissenting vote was highly correlated among groups.
[...] all groups were more inclined to vote no if members of other
groups did so as well.’( ibid:752)
Helge Berger and Ulrich Woitek (2005). DOES CONSERVATISM MATTER? A TIME-SERIES APPROACH TO
CENTRAL BANK BEHAVIOUR. The Economic Journal, Vol 115 (July), 745–766.
Instances of Rational Herding
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP Journal of Behavioral
Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Instances of Rational Herding
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP Journal of Behavioral
Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Instances of Rational Herding
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP Journal of Behavioral
Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Instances of Behavioral Herding
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP Journal of Behavioral
Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Instances of Rational/Behavioral Herding
Haiss, Peter (2010). ‘Bank Herding and Incentive Systems as Catalysts for the Financial Crisis’. The IUP Journal of Behavioral
Finance. Vol 7 (Nos. 1 &2), pp 30-58
Herding and Incentive Structures
http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/2002/smith-lecture.pdf
Herding Herds Shreds Commodity
Markets
Oil Future (CL1): Price
http://wikiposit.org/05/futget?ticker=CL&month=1
Herding Herds Shreds Commodity
Markets
Oil Future (CL1): Volume
http://www.wikiposit.com/plot?Y2h0P
Anti-herding and herding in
commodity markets
CL1 Price
Pierdzich et al (2010) have looked at the oil-
price forecasts of the Survey of Professional
Forecasters published by the European Central
Bank to analyze whether oil-price forecasters
CL1 Volume herd or anti-herd.
Financial Investment in Commodity Markets: Potential Impact on Commodity Prices & Volatility:I IF Commodities Task Force
Submission to the G20. Institute of International Finance., 2011, pp 5-6
Herding Across Financial Markets
Herding in Financial Markets
Long-Term Capital Management L.P. (LTCM) was a hedge fund management firm
that utilized absolute-return trading strategies, including fixed-income arbitrage,
statistical arbitrage, and pairs trading, combined with high leverage.
Founded in 1994 and had annualised returns of over 40% until 1997.
The firm, got entangled in the transformation of Russia from a
controlled economy to a market-based economy, and was bailed-out
after making losses of $4.6Billion in 1998 by other institutions under
the guidance of the US Federal Reserve
John Meriwether, formerly of Salomon Brothers, founded LCTM in 1994 and had
the Economic Science Nobel Lauerates (1997) Myron Scholes and Robert C.
Merton on its Board of Directors.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-Term_Capital_Management
Herding Basics:
Lock-stepping Stocks
Floyd Norris
writes
a ‘must-read’
financial blog in
the New York
Times. This is
what he had to
say on August 16,
2010.
Herding Basics:
Lock-stepping Stocks
August 2011
Herd mentality has descended upon
Wall Street, as S&P 500 stock
correlation reaches its highest
levels ever.
http://articles.businessinsider.com/2011-08-24/markets/30076940_1_herd-mentality-correlation-investors-rush
Herding Basics:
Lock-stepping Stocks
August 2011
The correlation of moves in individual stocks and the S&P 500 index is at a record,
making the job of long-only mutual fund managers to differentiate from the benchmark
virtually impossible, according to a report from Goldman Sachs.
The correlation for the S&P 500 and its members is at 0.73, according to Goldman,
meaning that the majority of stocks move in lockstep with the index on a daily basis.
This is at least the highest in 20 years and therefore likely a record
"Record high S&P 500 and sector correlation poses a challenge for fundamental
investors," said David Kostin, chief U.S. investment strategist at Goldman Sachs, in the
Friday note.
Herding Basics:
Lock-stepping Stocks
Kostin and other traders believe
this lemming behavior among
individual stocks could be
attributed to the popularity of
exchange-traded funds, which
allow investors to trade whole
indexes and sectors as easily as
individual stocks, and the surge
in lighting fast high-frequency
trading, the buying and selling
of millions of stocks in
milliseconds based on
algorithmic models.
Herding in Equity Markets
Guo and Shih (2008) have examined the co-movement of stock prices and its
association with herd behaviour during period of high-tech mania using the
implications for return data and found 5 key points:
3. return and volatility dispersion were not found to exhibit a consistent relation
with extreme market conditions in the Taiwan market.
Wen-Chung Guo and Hsiu-Ting Shih (2008). The co-movement of stock prices, herd behaviour and high-tech
mania. Applied Financial Economics, Vol 18, pp 1343–1350
Herding Herds Shreds Commodity
Markets
Herding Herds Shreds Commodity
Markets
http://commodities.about.com/b/2010/02/08/live-cattle-herding-higher.htm
Herding Herds Shreds Commodity
Markets
Financial Investment in Commodity Markets: Potential Impact on Commodity Prices & Volatility:I IF Commodities Task Force
Submission to the G20. Institute of International Finance., 2011
Herding across the markets:
Equities and Commodities
Financialization of commodity markets has
led to “herding” and more correlation
among previously uncorrelated asset classes
A related argument states that the rising
weight of financial investment in
commodity futures markets— particularly
via such practices as algorithmic trading
and the “herding effect,” has led to
investors being broadly indiscriminate
among different asset classes—using
information collected in one market (e.g.
equities) to form expectations about price
movements in another (e.g. commodities),
irrespective of fundamentals in the latter.
[..] This would suggest that financial
investment has led to increasing correlation
between commodities and other markets
Financial Investment in Commodity Markets: Potential Impact on Commodity Prices & Volatility:I IF Commodities Task Force
Submission to the G20. Institute of International Finance., 2011, pp 5-6
I flock, you flock, we flock