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Mapping Crisis-Driven Market Dynamics: A Transfer Entropy and Kramers-Moyal Approach to Financial Networks

Mapping Crisis-Driven Market Dynamics: A Transfer Entropy and Kramers-Moyal Approach to Financial Networks ArXiv ID: 2507.09554 “View on arXiv” Authors: Pouriya Khalilian, Amirhossein N. Golestani, Mohammad Eslamifar, Mostafa T. Firouzjaee, Javad T. Firouzjaee Abstract Financial markets are dynamic, interconnected systems where local shocks can trigger widespread instability, challenging portfolio managers and policymakers. Traditional correlation analysis often miss the directionality and temporal dynamics of information flow. To address this, we present a unified framework integrating Transfer Entropy (TE) and the N-dimensional Kramers-Moyal (KM) expansion to map static and time-resolved coupling among four major indices: Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC), WTI crude oil (WTI), gold (GC=F), and the US Dollar Index (DX-Y.NYB). TE captures directional information flow. KM models non-linear stochastic dynamics, revealing interactions often overlooked by linear methods. Using daily data from August 11, 2014, to September 8, 2024, we compute returns, confirm non-stationary using a conduct sliding-window TE and KM analyses. We find that during the COVID-19 pandemic (March-June 2020) and the Russia-Ukraine crisis (Feb-Apr 2022), average TE increases by 35% and 28%, respectively, indicating heightened directional flow. Drift coefficients highlight gold-dollar interactions as a persistent safe-haven channel, while oil-equity linkages show regime shifts, weakening under stress and rebounding quickly. Our results expose the shortcomings of linear measures and underscore the value of combining information-theoretic and stochastic drift methods. This approach offers actionable insights for adaptive hedging and informs macro-prudential policy by revealing the evolving architecture of systemic risk. ...

July 13, 2025 · 2 min · Research Team

Cryptocurrencies in the Balance Sheet: Insights from (Micro)Strategy -- Bitcoin Interactions

Cryptocurrencies in the Balance Sheet: Insights from (Micro)Strategy – Bitcoin Interactions ArXiv ID: 2505.14655 “View on arXiv” Authors: Sabrina Aufiero, Antonio Briola, Tesfaye Salarin, Fabio Caccioli, Silvia Bartolucci, Tomaso Aste Abstract This paper investigates the evolving link between cryptocurrency and equity markets in the context of the recent wave of corporate Bitcoin (BTC) treasury strategies. We assemble a dataset of 39 publicly listed firms holding BTC, from their first acquisition through April 2025. Using daily logarithmic returns, we first document significant positive co-movements via Pearson correlations and single factor model regressions, discovering an average BTC beta of 0.62, and isolating 12 companies, including Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy, MSTR), exhibiting a beta exceeding 1. We then classify firms into three groups reflecting their exposure to BTC, liquidity, and return co-movements. We use transfer entropy (TE) to capture the direction of information flow over time. Transfer entropy analysis consistently identifies BTC as the dominant information driver, with brief, announcement-driven feedback from stocks to BTC during major financial events. Our results highlight the critical need for dynamic hedging ratios that adapt to shifting information flows. These findings provide important insights for investors and managers regarding risk management and portfolio diversification in a period of growing integration of digital assets into corporate treasuries. ...

May 20, 2025 · 2 min · Research Team

High-frequency lead-lag relationships in the Chinese stock index futures market: tick-by-tick dynamics of calendar spreads

High-frequency lead-lag relationships in the Chinese stock index futures market: tick-by-tick dynamics of calendar spreads ArXiv ID: 2501.03171 “View on arXiv” Authors: Unknown Abstract Lead-lag relationships, integral to market dynamics, offer valuable insights into the trading behavior of high-frequency traders (HFTs) and the flow of information at a granular level. This paper investigates the lead-lag relationships between stock index futures contracts of different maturities in the Chinese financial futures market (CFFEX). Using high-frequency (tick-by-tick) data, we analyze how price movements in near-month futures contracts influence those in longer-dated contracts, such as next-month, quarterly, and semi-annual contracts. Our findings reveal a consistent pattern of price discovery, with the near-month contract leading the others by one tick, driven primarily by liquidity. Additionally, we identify a negative feedback effect of the “lead-lag spread” on the leading asset, which can predict returns of leading asset. Backtesting results demonstrate the profitability of trading based on the lead-lag spread signal, even after accounting for transaction costs. Altogether, our analysis offers valuable insights to understand and capitalize on the evolving dynamics of futures markets. ...

January 6, 2025 · 2 min · Research Team