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October 3, 2005 – When Stock Market Models Crash

Didier Sornette, Professor of Geophysics at UCLA, has an interest in financial markets as examples of complex systems. He authored Why Stock Markets Crash : Critical Events in Complex Financial Systems, published in November 2002. He has maintained on his web site for several years a series of predictions regarding the behavior of the S&P 500 index. In initiating this series, he wrote:

"Based on a theory of cooperative herding and imitation working both in bullish as well as in bearish regimes that we have developed in a series of papers, we have detected the existence of a clear signature of herding in the decay of the US S&P 500 index since August 2000 with high statistical significance, in the form of strong log-periodic components."

His September 2002 paper (with Wei Zhou) entitled "The US 2000-2002 Market Descent: How Much Longer and Deeper?" provides a detailed justification of this assertion, including a comparison of the 1990 Japanese and 2000 U.S. stock market crashes. In this entry, we trace the evolution and assess the accuracy of Professor Sornette's predictions, as follows:

In summary, despite his model's crash, Professor Sornette is still trying. We wonder whether he is being serially Fooled by Randomness. Perhaps not, since the unfooled Nassim Taleb gave his book a five-star review.

At least he knew how to time a book on market crashes.

For reviews of the outputs of other market experts, browse Guru Grades and Reviews of Web Sites and Books. See especially our blog entry of 9/26/05.

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