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Mean-Field Price Formation on Trees with Multi-Population and Non-Rational Agents

Mean-Field Price Formation on Trees with Multi-Population and Non-Rational Agents ArXiv ID: 2510.11261 “View on arXiv” Authors: Masaaki Fujii Abstract This work solves the equilibrium price formation problem for the risky stock by combining mean-field game theory with the binomial tree framework, adapting the classic approach of Cox, Ross & Rubinstein. For agents with exponential and recursive utilities of exponential-type, we prove the existence of a unique mean-field market-clearing equilibrium and derive an explicit analytic formula for equilibrium transition probabilities of the stock price on the binomial lattice. The agents face stochastic terminal liabilities and incremental endowments that depend on unhedgeable common and idiosyncratic factors, in addition to the stock price path. We also incorporate an external order flow. Furthermore, the analytic tractability of the proposed approach allows us to extend the framework in two important directions: First, we incorporate multi-population heterogeneity, allowing agents to differ in functional forms for their liabilities, endowments, and risk coefficients. Second, we relax the rational expectations hypothesis by modeling agents operating under subjective probability measures which induce stochastically biased views on the stock transition probabilities. Our numerical examples illustrate the qualitative effects of these components on the equilibrium price distribution. ...

October 13, 2025 · 2 min · Research Team

Mean field equilibrium asset pricing model under partial observation: An exponential quadratic Gaussian approach

Mean field equilibrium asset pricing model under partial observation: An exponential quadratic Gaussian approach ArXiv ID: 2410.01352 “View on arXiv” Authors: Unknown Abstract This paper studies an asset pricing model in a partially observable market with a large number of heterogeneous agents using the mean field game theory. In this model, we assume that investors can only observe stock prices and must infer the risk premium from these observations when determining trading strategies. We characterize the equilibrium risk premium in such a market through a solution to the mean field backward stochastic differential equation (BSDE). Specifically, the solution to the mean field BSDE can be expressed semi-analytically by employing an exponential quadratic Gaussian framework. We then construct the risk premium process, which cannot be observed directly by investors, endogenously using the Kalman-Bucy filtering theory. In addition, we include a simple numerical simulation to visualize the dynamics of our market model. ...

October 2, 2024 · 2 min · Research Team