{ "id": "cond-mat/0103606", "version": "v1", "published": "2001-03-29T13:53:54.000Z", "updated": "2001-03-29T13:53:54.000Z", "title": "Dynamics of correlations in the stock market", "authors": [ "S. Drozdz", "F. Gruemmer", "F. Ruf", "J. Speth" ], "comment": "10 pages, 5 figures, LaTeX2e, to appear in \"Empirical Science of Financial Fluctuations\", Tokyo, Nov. 2000 (Springer Verlag 2001)", "journal": "Empirical Science of Financial Fluctuations, H. Takayasu (Ed.), Springer-Verlag Tokio 2002, p.41", "categories": [ "cond-mat.stat-mech", "cond-mat.soft", "q-fin.ST" ], "abstract": "Financial empirical correlation matrices of all the companies which both, the Deutsche Aktienindex (DAX) and the Dow Jones comprised during the time period 1990-1999 are studied using a time window of a limited, either 30 or 60, number of trading days. This allows a clear identification of the resulting correlations. On both these markets the decreases turn out to be always accompanied by a sizable separation of one strong collective eigenstate of the correlation matrix, while increases are more competitive and thus less collective. Generically, however, the remaining eigenstates of the correlation matrix are, on average, consistent with predictions of the random matrix theory. Effects connected with the world globalization are also discussed and a leading role of the Dow Jones is quantified. This effect is particularly spectacular during the last few years, and it turns out to be crucial to properly account for the time-zone delays in order to identify it.", "revisions": [ { "version": "v1", "updated": "2001-03-29T13:53:54.000Z" } ], "analyses": { "keywords": [ "stock market", "dow jones", "correlation matrix", "financial empirical correlation matrices", "random matrix theory" ], "tags": [ "journal article" ], "note": { "typesetting": "LaTeX", "pages": 10, "language": "en", "license": "arXiv", "status": "editable", "adsabs": "2001cond.mat..3606D" } } }