Abstract
In this paper, we study the long-run wealth
distribution of agents with different trading
strategies in the framework of the Genoa Artificial
Stock Market.The Genoa market is an agent-based
simulated market able to reproduce the main stylised
facts observed in financial markets, i.e., fat-tailed
distribution of returns and volatility clustering.
Various populations of traders have been introduced in
a`thermal bath' made by random traders who make random
buy and sell decisions constrained by the available
limited resources and depending on past price
volatility. We study both trend following and trend
contrarian behaviour; fundamentalist traders (i.e.,
traders believing that stocks have a fundamental price
depending on factors external to the market) are also
investigated. Results show that the strategy alone does
not allow forecasting which population will prevail.
Trading strategies yield different results in different
market conditions. Generally, in a closed market (a
market with no money creation process), we find that
trend followers lose relevance and money to other
populations of traders and eventually disappear,
whereas in an open market (a market with money
inflows), trend followers can survive, but their
strategy is less profitable than the strategy of other
populations.
Users
Please
log in to take part in the discussion (add own reviews or comments).