Econophysics and oil

Many years ago when I was a lowly undergrad, I heard mumblings about physicists working in the financial and economic fields. They weren’t changing careers, they were applying math and physics concepts to create financial and economic models.

Today I ran into an article (registration required, but it’s free) over on PhysicsWorld about some econophysicists who analyzed recent oil prices using statistical physics methods and came to the conclusion that much of the run-up in oil prices is due to speculation, rather than increased demand.

Abstract:

We present an analysis of oil prices in US$ and in other major currencies that diagnoses unsustainable faster-than-exponential behavior. This provides evidence that the recent oil price run-up has been amplified by speculative behavior of the type found during a bubble-like expansion.

From the paper:

Based on analogies with statistical physics and complexity theory, we have developed in the last decade an approach that diagnoses bubbles as transient superexponential regimes. In a nutshell, our methodology aims at detecting the transient phases where positive feedbacks operating on some markets or asset classes create local unsustainable price run-ups. The mathematical signature of these bubbles is a log-periodic power law (LPPL). The power law models the faster-than-exponential growth culminating in finite time. The log-periodic oscillations reflect hierarchical structures as well as competition between the trading dynamics of fundamental value and momentum investors

In conclusion, the present study supports the hypothesis that the recent oil price run-up, when expressed in any of the major currencies, has been amplified by speculative behavior of the type found during a bubble-like expansion. The underlying positive feedbacks, nucleated by rumors of rising scarcity, may result from one or several of the following factors acting together: (1) protective hedging against future oil price increases and a weakening dollar whose anticipations amplify hedging in a positive self-reinforcing loop; (2) search for a new high return investment, following the collapse of real-estate, the securitization disaster and poor yields of equities, whose expectations endorsed by a growing pool of hedge, pension and sovereign funds will transform it in a self-fulfilling prophecy; (3) the recent development since 2006 of deregulated oil future trading, allowing spot oil price to be actually more and more determined by speculative future markets and thus more and more decoupled from genuine supply-demand equilibrium

A pre-print of their paper, The 2006-2008 Oil Bubble and Beyond, is available from arxiv.org. It’s actually a pretty interesting read.

Movable Type 4.2RC3 note 1

If you’re messing with the Movable Type release candidates, the Comments template will need to be edited because the CommentReplyLink tag has apparently been renamed to CommentReplyToLink between RC2 and RC3.

Roundup subbing

While Heather’s off enjoying her rainy Myrtle Beach vacation, I’ll fill in a bit with my small subset of TBB and some random clicking through the blogroll.

Big news this week was the death of George Carlin, marked by several LC bloggers.

Allison at modern.charleston notes the North Charleston Farmer’s Market has moved.
Geoff goes from pirate to legit.

From illegally bitorrenting some of the tracks in the first place, to legally downloading all of them off of iTunes, I then decided that what I really wanted was a copy of CD to keep forever, because – well – there’s something still a teeny bit odd about buying something and JUST having it as an AAC or MP3 file isn’t there. Isn’t there?

YDPC is back with more pictures of tasty nom-noms.

Her rhubarb crisp is really really good.

A poop story only a parent could come up with I suppose 🙂

One day I dumped the entire grocery bag full of dirty underwear into the washer without sorting it first. I washed the load and then transferred it to the dryer. About fifteen minutes later I started to notice that my house smelled odd, which was funny since I was cleaning my kitchen at the moment. But rather than the smell of Comet wafting through my home, there was another “odor” that I couldn’t put my finger on. Thirty minutes later the dryer buzzed that my laundry was done. At this point the house smelled FUNKY.

Don’t forget the last Thursday meetup is coming up in a couple of days!

W00t! 5!

Much to my surprise, this blog turns 5 today!

5 years of babble, geek speak and other random things.

In the past 5 years, I’ve gone from feeling alone in the blog-o-verse to discovering a whole bunch of local bloggers and meeting the people behind them.

Looking forward to what the next year of blogging brings.

Laundry musings

So why is it that out of all the shirts, pants, socks and everything else that goes into the laundry, my boxers are the only things that always get turned inside out?