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Theoretical Economics as Successive Approximations of Statistical Moments

Published 28 Sep 2023 in econ.GN, q-fin.EC, and q-fin.ST | (2310.05971v2)

Abstract: This paper studies the links between the descriptions of macroeconomic variables and statistical moments of market trade, price, and return. The randomness of market trade values and volumes during the averaging interval {\Delta} results in the random properties of price and return. We describe how averages and volatilities of price and return depend on the averages, volatilities, and correlations of market trade values and volumes. The averages, volatilities, and correlations of market trade, price, and return can behave randomly during the long interval {\Delta}2>>{\Delta}. To describe their statistical properties during the long interval {\Delta}2, we introduce the secondary averaging procedure of trade, price, and return. We explain why, in the coming years, predictions of market-based probabilities of price and return will be limited by Gaussian distributions. We discuss the roots of the internal weakness of the commonly used hedging tool, Value-at-Risk, that cannot be solved and remains the source of additional risks and losses. One should consider theoretical economics as a set of successive approximations, each of which describes the next array of the n-th statistical moments of market trades, price, return, and macroeconomic variables, which are repeatedly averaged during the sequence of increasing time intervals.

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