Introduction

Wild fluctuations in stock prices1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8 continue to have a huge impact on the world economy and the personal fortunes of millions, shedding light on the complex nature of financial and economic systems. For these systems, a truly gargantuan amount of pre-existing precise financial market data9,10,11 complemented by new big data ressources12,13,14,15 is available for analyses.

The complex mechanisms of financial market moves can lead to sudden trend switches16,17,18 in a number of stocks. Such sudden trend switches can occur in a synchronized fashion, in a large number of stocks simultaneously, or in an unsynchronized fashion, affecting only a few stocks at the same time.

Diversification in stock markets refers to the reduction of portfolio risk caused by the investment in a variety of stocks. If stock prices do not move up and down in perfect synchrony, a diversified portfolio will have less risk than the weighted average risk of its constituent stocks19,20. Hence it should be possible to reduce risk in price of individual stocks by the combination of an appropriate set of stocks. To identify such an appropriate set of stocks with anti-correlated price time series, the assumption mostly used is that the correlations among stocks are constant over time21,22,23,24,25,26. This widely used assumption is also the basis for the determination of capital requirements of financial institutions that usually own a huge variety of constituents belonging to different asset classes.

Recent studies building on the availability of huge and detailed data sets of financial markets have analyzed and modeled the static and dynamic behavior of this very complex system27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37,38,39, suggesting that financial markets are governed by systemic shifts and display non-equilibrium properties.

A very well known stylized fact of financial markets is the leverage effect, a term coined by Black to describe the negative correlation between past price returns and future realized volatilities in stock markets. According to Reigneron et al.40, the index leverage effect can be decomposed into a volatility effect and a correlation effect. In the course of recent financial market crises, this effect has regained center stage and the work of different groups has focused on uncovering its true nature40,41,42,43,44,45,46). Reigneron et al. analyzed daily returns of six indices from 2000 to 2010 and found that a downward index trends increase the average correlation between stocks, as quantified by measurements of eigenvalues of the conditional correlation matrix. They suggest that a quadratic term should be included to the linear regressions of the dependence of mean correlation on the index return the previous day.

Here, we will expand on these results utilizing 72 years of trading of the 30 Dow Jones industrial average (DJIA) components (see also47,48). Using this financial data set we will quantify state-dependent stock market correlations and analyze how they vary in face of dramatic market losses. In such “stress” scenarios, reliable correlations are most needed to protect the value of a portfolio against losses.

Results

To quantify state-dependent correlations, we analyze historical daily closing prices of the N ≡ 30 components of the DJIA over 72 years, from 15 March 1939 until 31 December 2010, which can be downloaded as a Supplementary Dataset . During these T ≡ 18596 trading days, various adjustments of the DJIA occurred. We explicitly consider an adjustment of the index when one of the 30 stocks is removed from the index and replaced by a new stock in order to ensure that we accurately reproduce the index value of the DJIA at each trading day (Fig. 1).

Figure 1
figure 1

Index components of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA).

(A) To calculate the index value of the DJIA, we determine the sum of prices of all 30 stocks belonging to the index and divide them by the depicted “DJIA Divisor”. Adjustments of this divisor ensure that various corporate actions such as stock splits do not affect the index value. (B) We analyze DJIA values and prices of all index components for 72 years from March 15, 1939 until December 31, 2010. Vertical dashed lines correspond to events in which at least one stock was removed from the index and replaced by another stock. The index changes are explicitly taken into account to ensure that the dataset, comprising 18,596 trading days, accurately reflects all 30 daily closing prices needed for the index calculation. We use current and historical ticker symbols to abbreviate company names50.

To calculate the official index value pDJIA, the sum of prices of all 30 stocks is divided by a normalization factor dDJIA, known as the DJIA divisor. The DJIA divisor anticipates index jumps caused by effects of stock splits, bonus issues, dividends payouts or replacements of individual index components keeping the index value consistent (Fig. 1A). Consequently, the index value of the DJIA at day t is given by

where pi(t) reflects the price of DJIA component i at day t in units of USD and where t is measured in units of trading days. The normalization factor dDJIA is also measured in units of USD. Consequently, the value of the DJIA is dimensionless. Due to changes in the components of the DJIA, a component i does not necessarily reflect prices of one stock only. A subscript i is also used for a component's predecessor or successor.

To quantify state-dependent correlations, we calculate the mean value of Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients49 among all DJIA components in a time interval comprising Δt trading days each (Fig. 2). In each time interval comprising Δt trading day, we determine correlation coefficients for all pairs of N ≡ 30 stocks. From these correlation coefficients, we calculate their mean value for each time interval separately.

Figure 2
figure 2

Visualization of the analysis method.

(A) For a time interval of Δt trading days, we calculate for the index the price return log(pDJIA(t + Δt))/log(pDJIA(t)) in this interval. (B) We determine the Pearson correlation coefficients of all pairs of all 30 DJIA components depicted in a matrix of correlation coefficients. Ticker symbols are used to abbreviate company names in this example. We calculate the mean correlation coefficient by averaging over all non-diagonal elements of this matrix.

We relate mean correlation coefficients to corresponding market states, which we quantify by DJIA index returns for time intervals starting at trading day t and ending at trading day t + Δt,

We normalize the time series of DJIA index returns, rDJIA(t, Δt), by its standard deviation, σDJIAt), defined as

The normalized time series of DJIA index returns, R(t, Δt), is given by

In each time interval comprising Δt trading days, we calculate a local correlation matrix consisting of Pearson correlation coefficients49 capturing the dependencies among individual stock returns. Time-dependent returns of an individual stock i are given by

In a Δt trading day interval, we calculate a correlation coefficient between return time series of stock i and return time series of stock j by

with the standard deviation of return time series i determined in the same time interval comprising Δt trading days defined as

The mean correlation coefficient of all DJIA components is given by the mean of all non-diagonal matrix elements of ci,j

Figure 3A depicts the relationship between normalized DJIA index return and corresponding mean correlation coefficient capturing the dependency amoung its components. Figure 3B depicts both normalized DJIA index returns and mean correlation coefficients which are used in our analysis for Δt = 10 days. Negative index returns tend to come with stronger correlation coefficients than positive index returns (Fig. 3A). Results for different time intervals Δt collapse into one single curve, suggesting a universal relationship.

Figure 3
figure 3

Quantification of state-dependent correlations among index components.

(A) Graphs reflect the relationship between the average correlation coefficient C among stocks belonging to the Dow Jones Industrial Average and its normalized return in intervals of Δt trading days. The mean correlation coefficient shows a striking, non-constant behavior, with a minimum between 0 and +1 standard deviations reflecting typical market conditions. For the range of all Δt values analyzed, we find the data collapse onto a single line. Corresponding error bars are shown in Fig. 4A. The data collapse suggests that the striking increase of the mean correlation coefficient for positive and negative values of the normalized index return is independent of the time interval Δt. The largest mean correlation coefficients coincide with the most negative index returns. (B) Normalized DJIA returns, R(t, Δt) and mean correlation coefficients, C(t, Δt), shown for Δt = 10 days. For both time series, we reject the null hypothesis of non-stationarity on the basis of results from the Augmented Dickey-Fuller test. For R(t, Δt = 10), we obtain DF = −24.28, p < 0.01, while for C(t, Δt = 10) we obtain DF = −13.45, p < 0.01.

To quantify the relationship between normalized index return and average correlation, we aggregate mean correlation coefficients for different values of Δt ranging from 10 trading days to 60 trading days (Fig. 4),

We find consistency with two linear relationships quantifying the increase of the aggregated correlation C+ for positive index return R and the aggregated correlation C for negative index return R,

with a+ = 0.064 ± 0.002 and b+ = 0.188 ± 0.004 (p-value < 0.001) quantifies the right part in Fig. 4A. The aggregatated correlations,

with a = −0.085 ± 0.002 and b = 0.267 ± 0.005 (p–value < 0.001) quantifies the left part in Fig. 4A. The larger is a negative or positive DJIA return the larger is the corresponding mean correlation. In contrast, a reference scenario of randomly shuffled stock returns leads to a constant relationship (Fig. 4B), supporting our findings in Fig. 4A. However, this method destroys all correlations of this complex financial system and not only the link between aggregated correlation C* and normalized index returns R. As an additional test, we use non-shuffled time series of underlying stock returns for our analysis and randomly shuffle the DJIA return time series only (Fig. 4C). We find that the linear relationships reported in Fig. 4A also vanishes in this scenario highlighting the robustness of our findings.

Figure 4
figure 4

Quantification of the aggregated correlation.

(A) Utilizing the data collapse reported in Fig. 3, we aggregate in each bin of the graph the mean correlation coefficients for 10 days ≤ Δt ≤ 60 days. Error bars are plotted depicting −1 and +1 standard deviations around the mean of the mean correlation values included in each bin. The increase of the aggregated correlation C* for positive and negative index returns is consistent with two linear relationships: C* = a+R + b+ with a+ = 0.064 ± 0.002 and b+ = 0.188 ± 0.004 (p – value < 0.001) quantifies the right part. C* = aR + b with a = −0.085 ± 0.002 and b = 0.267 ± 0.005 (p – value < 0.001). The red colored regions are used to obtain the coefficients. In order to reduce noise, the range of normalized DJIA returns is restricted to bin values occurring, on average, more than 10 times for individual Δt intervals. (B) By randomly shuffling time series of daily returns for each stock individually, we test the robustness of the relationship and find that the linear relationships reported in (A) disappear, supporting our findings. (C) We use non-shuffled time series of underlying stock returns for an additional parallel analysis with randomly shuffled DJIA returns. The above linear relationships also vanish in this test scenario underlining the robustness of our findings.

Our findings are qualitatively consistent with results reported in previous work40,43,44 but quantitatively different. Instead of linear relationships, Reigneron et al.40 suggest that a quadratic term should be included in the linear regressions of the dependence of mean correlation on the index return on the previous day.

Discussion

In summary, we find a universal relationship between the mean correlation among DJIA components which can be considered as a stock market portfolio and the normalized returns of this portfolio. This suggests that a “diversification breakdown” tends to occur when stable correlations are most needed for portfolio protection. Our findings, which are qualitatively consistent with earlier findings42,44 but quantitatively different, could be used to anticipate changes in mean correlation of portfolios when financial markets are suffering significant losses. This would enable a more accurate assessment of the risk of losses. Thus, we suggest that in order to anticipate underlying correlation risks the possibility exists to hedge index derivatives. Our results could also shed light on why correlation risks in mortgage bundles were underestimated at the beginning of the recent financial crisis. Future work will build upon the relationship quantified here to uncover the underlying mechanisms governing this phenomenon.