Classical Ergodicity and Modern Portfolio Theory
Author(s) -
Geoffrey Poitras,
John Heaney
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
chinese journal of mathematics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2314-8071
DOI - 10.1155/2015/737905
Subject(s) - ergodicity , portfolio , mathematical economics , economics , modern portfolio theory , financial economics , neoclassical economics , positive economics , epistemology , econometrics , mathematics , philosophy , statistics
What role have theoretical methods initially developed in mathematics and physics played in the progress of financial economics? What is the relationship between financial economics and econophysics? What is the relevance of the “classical ergodicity hypothesis” to modern portfolio theory? This paper addresses these questions by reviewing the etymology and history of the classical ergodicity hypothesis in 19th century statistical mechanics. An explanation of classical ergodicity is provided that establishes a connection to the fundamental empirical problem of using nonexperimental data to verify theoretical propositions in modern portfolio theory. The role of the ergodicity assumption in the ex post/ex ante quandary confronting modern portfolio theory is also examined
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