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Using normal distributions as a heuristic to model interdependent events is generally effective if a few conditions pertain. | Using normal distributions as a heuristic to model interdependent events is generally effective if a few conditions pertain. | ||
{{L1}}The market is generally diversified. If you carve out all the personal idiosyncrasies — stochastic modelling requires — that might explain why one rational person is prepared to sell what another is prepared to buy, it stands to reason that a buyer’s gain is a seller’s loss. In a diversified market, a sudden collapse in value for some traders means an appreciation for others, and all kinds of other effects. | {{L1}}The market is generally diversified. If you carve out all the personal idiosyncrasies — stochastic modelling requires — that might explain why one rational person is prepared to sell what another is prepared to buy, it stands to reason that a buyer’s gain is a seller’s loss. In a diversified market, a sudden collapse in value for some traders means an appreciation for others, and all kinds of other effects. See: [[Brownian motion]]<li> | ||
No individual participant, or group of participants with correlated interests dominate the market <li> | No individual participant, or group of participants with correlated interests dominate the market <li> | ||
Information about the market, and any “crowded” positions in the market, is widely held. Of course individual positions are private, proprietary and confidential, so this last condition is usually satisfied by the general assumption of liquidity: in a sufficiently deep market, no-one is big enough to have such a concentrated position, so we can take it as a given that no-one does. (In some markets there are materiality thresholds over which positions must be reported too.)</ol> | Information about the market, and any “crowded” positions in the market, is widely held. Of course individual positions are private, proprietary and confidential, so this last condition is usually satisfied by the general assumption of liquidity: in a sufficiently deep market, no-one is big enough to have such a concentrated position, so we can take it as a given that no-one does. (In some markets there are materiality thresholds over which positions must be reported too.)</ol> |