Categorías: Todo - feedback - markets - chaos - globalization

por Artem Shevcov hace 6 años

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Butterfly effect

The butterfly effect, a concept from chaos theory, posits that small actions can have far-reaching and unpredictable consequences. First introduced by Edward Lorenz in 1972 during a scientific meeting, it illustrates how minor atmospheric changes, like a butterfly flapping its wings, could eventually lead to significant weather events, such as a tornado.

Butterfly effect

The phrase suggests that the flap of a butterfly’s wings in Japan could create a small change in the atmosphere that might eventually lead to a tornado in Texas

What meaning has the frase“the butterfly effect”?

The phrase was first mentioned during a scientific meeting in 1972. Scientist Edward Lorenz gave a talk on his work regarding weather prediction models.

Who and when was first coined the phrase “the butterfly effect”

Origin and Meaning of Butterfly Effect

Improvements in technology and wider access to the Internet has increased the degree to which international markets influence each other

How it can lead to more episodes of extreme market volatility

Why it has become more important in nowadays ?

globalization continues to increase and capital markets connect

GLOBALIZATION AND THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT

Application of Chaos Theory to Markets

Explanation of volatile bear markets
The markets can suddenly shift due to outside factors, which causes investors to pay attention only to negative news. Initial selling leads to more selling as market participants liquidate their positions. The negative feedback loop tends to accelerate quickly, often resulting in a market full of undervalued stocks
how financial markets operate
Markets tend to grow bubbles that eventually pop with drastic consequences. Financial bubbles often grow because of positive feedback

Importance in finance world