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Learning to simulate realistic limit order book markets from data as a World Agent

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Listed:
  • Andrea Coletta
  • Aymeric Moulin
  • Svitlana Vyetrenko
  • Tucker Balch

Abstract

Multi-agent market simulators usually require careful calibration to emulate real markets, which includes the number and the type of agents. Poorly calibrated simulators can lead to misleading conclusions, potentially causing severe loss when employed by investment banks, hedge funds, and traders to study and evaluate trading strategies. In this paper, we propose a world model simulator that accurately emulates a limit order book market -- it requires no agent calibration but rather learns the simulated market behavior directly from historical data. Traditional approaches fail short to learn and calibrate trader population, as historical labeled data with details on each individual trader strategy is not publicly available. Our approach proposes to learn a unique "world" agent from historical data. It is intended to emulate the overall trader population, without the need of making assumptions about individual market agent strategies. We implement our world agent simulator models as a Conditional Generative Adversarial Network (CGAN), as well as a mixture of parametric distributions, and we compare our models against previous work. Qualitatively and quantitatively, we show that the proposed approaches consistently outperform previous work, providing more realism and responsiveness.

Suggested Citation

  • Andrea Coletta & Aymeric Moulin & Svitlana Vyetrenko & Tucker Balch, 2022. "Learning to simulate realistic limit order book markets from data as a World Agent," Papers 2210.09897, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2210.09897
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Tucker Hybinette Balch & Mahmoud Mahfouz & Joshua Lockhart & Maria Hybinette & David Byrd, 2019. "How to Evaluate Trading Strategies: Single Agent Market Replay or Multiple Agent Interactive Simulation?," Papers 1906.12010, arXiv.org.
    2. R. Cont, 2001. "Empirical properties of asset returns: stylized facts and statistical issues," Quantitative Finance, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 1(2), pages 223-236.
    3. Andrea Coletta & Matteo Prata & Michele Conti & Emanuele Mercanti & Novella Bartolini & Aymeric Moulin & Svitlana Vyetrenko & Tucker Balch, 2021. "Towards Realistic Market Simulations: a Generative Adversarial Networks Approach," Papers 2110.13287, arXiv.org.
    4. Carl Chiarella & Giulia Iori, 2002. "A simulation analysis of the microstructure of double auction markets," Quantitative Finance, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 2(5), pages 346-353.
    5. J. Doyne Farmer & Duncan Foley, 2009. "The economy needs agent-based modelling," Nature, Nature, vol. 460(7256), pages 685-686, August.
    6. LeBaron, Blake & Yamamoto, Ryuichi, 2007. "Long-memory in an order-driven market," Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications, Elsevier, vol. 383(1), pages 85-89.
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Christopher J. Cho & Timothy J. Norman & Manuel Nunes, 2023. "PRIME: A Price-Reverting Impact Model of a cryptocurrency Exchange," Papers 2305.07559, arXiv.org.
    2. Matteo Prata & Giuseppe Masi & Leonardo Berti & Viviana Arrigoni & Andrea Coletta & Irene Cannistraci & Svitlana Vyetrenko & Paola Velardi & Novella Bartolini, 2023. "LOB-Based Deep Learning Models for Stock Price Trend Prediction: A Benchmark Study," Papers 2308.01915, arXiv.org, revised Sep 2023.
    3. Zacharia Issa & Blanka Horvath & Maud Lemercier & Cristopher Salvi, 2023. "Non-adversarial training of Neural SDEs with signature kernel scores," Papers 2305.16274, arXiv.org.
    4. Zijian Shi & John Cartlidge, 2023. "Neural Stochastic Agent-Based Limit Order Book Simulation: A Hybrid Methodology," Papers 2303.00080, arXiv.org.
    5. Song Wei & Andrea Coletta & Svitlana Vyetrenko & Tucker Balch, 2023. "INTAGS: Interactive Agent-Guided Simulation," Papers 2309.01784, arXiv.org, revised Nov 2023.

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