Copyright © 2011 Paolo Falbo and Rosanna Grassi. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyse the effect introduced in the dynamics of a financial market
when agents anticipate the occurrence of a correlation breakdown. What emerges is that correlation
breakdowns can act both as a consequence and as a triggering factor in the emergence of financial
crises rational bubbles. We propose a market with two kinds of agents: speculators and rational
investors. Rational agents use excess demand information to estimate the variance-covariance
structure of assets returns, and their investment decisions are represented as a Markowitz optimal
portfolio allocation. Speculators are uninformed agents and form their expectations by imitative
behavior, depending on market excess demand. Several market equilibria result, depending on the
prevalence of one of the two types of agents. Differing from previous results in the literature on
the interaction between market dynamics and speculative behavior, rational agents can generate
financial crises, even without the speculator contribution.