Volume 5, Issue 1
Pricing Stocks with Trading Volumes

Ben Duan, Yutian Li, Dawei Lu, Yang Lu & Ran Zhang

CSIAM Trans. Appl. Math., 5 (2024), pp. 1-17.

Published online: 2024-02

Export citation
  • Abstract

The present paper proposes a new framework for describing the stock price dynamics. In the traditional geometric Brownian motion model and its variants, volatility plays a vital role. The modern studies of asset pricing expand around volatility, trying to improve the understanding of it and remove the gap between the theory and market data. Unlike this, we propose to replace volatility with trading volume in stock pricing models. This pricing strategy is based on two hypotheses: A price-volume relation with an idea borrowed from fluid flows and a white-noise hypothesis for the price rate of change (ROC) that is verified via statistic testing on actual market data. The new framework can be easily adopted to local volume and stochastic volume models for the option pricing problem, which will point out a new possible direction for this central problem in quantitative finance.

  • AMS Subject Headings

91G30, 91G20, 62G10

  • Copyright

COPYRIGHT: © Global Science Press

  • Email address
  • BibTex
  • RIS
  • TXT
@Article{CSIAM-AM-5-1, author = {Duan , BenLi , YutianLu , DaweiLu , Yang and Zhang , Ran}, title = {Pricing Stocks with Trading Volumes}, journal = {CSIAM Transactions on Applied Mathematics}, year = {2024}, volume = {5}, number = {1}, pages = {1--17}, abstract = {

The present paper proposes a new framework for describing the stock price dynamics. In the traditional geometric Brownian motion model and its variants, volatility plays a vital role. The modern studies of asset pricing expand around volatility, trying to improve the understanding of it and remove the gap between the theory and market data. Unlike this, we propose to replace volatility with trading volume in stock pricing models. This pricing strategy is based on two hypotheses: A price-volume relation with an idea borrowed from fluid flows and a white-noise hypothesis for the price rate of change (ROC) that is verified via statistic testing on actual market data. The new framework can be easily adopted to local volume and stochastic volume models for the option pricing problem, which will point out a new possible direction for this central problem in quantitative finance.

}, issn = {2708-0579}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.4208/csiam-am.SO-2022-0030}, url = {http://global-sci.org/intro/article_detail/csiam-am/22918.html} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Pricing Stocks with Trading Volumes AU - Duan , Ben AU - Li , Yutian AU - Lu , Dawei AU - Lu , Yang AU - Zhang , Ran JO - CSIAM Transactions on Applied Mathematics VL - 1 SP - 1 EP - 17 PY - 2024 DA - 2024/02 SN - 5 DO - http://doi.org/10.4208/csiam-am.SO-2022-0030 UR - https://global-sci.org/intro/article_detail/csiam-am/22918.html KW - Asset pricing, volatility, trading volume, stock price model, white noise. AB -

The present paper proposes a new framework for describing the stock price dynamics. In the traditional geometric Brownian motion model and its variants, volatility plays a vital role. The modern studies of asset pricing expand around volatility, trying to improve the understanding of it and remove the gap between the theory and market data. Unlike this, we propose to replace volatility with trading volume in stock pricing models. This pricing strategy is based on two hypotheses: A price-volume relation with an idea borrowed from fluid flows and a white-noise hypothesis for the price rate of change (ROC) that is verified via statistic testing on actual market data. The new framework can be easily adopted to local volume and stochastic volume models for the option pricing problem, which will point out a new possible direction for this central problem in quantitative finance.

Ben Duan, Yutian Li, Dawei Lu, Yang Lu & Ran Zhang. (2024). Pricing Stocks with Trading Volumes. CSIAM Transactions on Applied Mathematics. 5 (1). 1-17. doi:10.4208/csiam-am.SO-2022-0030
Copy to clipboard
The citation has been copied to your clipboard