Are Financial Market Returns Randomly Distributed? Yes And No

The art and science of modeling returns of financial assets is forever unsatisfying because no one model fully captures the true behavior of asset performances. As a result, there comes a point when researchers are forced to pick a poison that appears less wrong than the alternatives.

Subjectivity on this front is unavoidable for any number of tasks in portfolio management and design. From simulating to forecasting and beyond, every modeling exercise in finance tends to come down to using a set of approximations that don’t offend our expectations too harshly.

As a simple example, consider the distribution of US equity market returns. Are they normally distributed? The answer depends on the time window. In turn, the implications cast a long shadow on what you can, and can’t, reasonably achieve with modeling.

Consider how one-day returns are distributed via SPDR S&P 500 (SPY), an ETF proxy for the US stock market (based on data for 1993-2022). In the chart below, it’s clear that returns are basically symmetric around 0. SPY’s one-day performances don’t exactly match a theoretically pure random distribution (red line), but they’re close enough so that most of the time, and for most modeling applications, you can assume normality prevails.

This assumption has a wide range of implications. For example, if one-day returns closely follow a normal distribution, forecasting one-day returns is futile, at least most of the time.

But there’s nothing normal about the one-year return distribution for SPY, as the second chart reminds. The results are positively skewed and there’s a clear incidence of fat tails. The one-year distribution, in short, tells a very different story from one-day returns and so the opportunities for this time window are quite different vs. one-day results.  

As one exampel, the difference implies that one-year returns provide the basis for relatively reliable forecasts. You don’t need a Ph.D. in finance to see that your odds are forecasting success are considerably higher with a one-year time horizon vs. one day. Or perhaps it’s more accurate to say that you’re likely to be less wrong with one-year forecasts vs. one-day estimates.

But while one-day returns are approximately random, they’re not perfectly random. Although it’s hard to see in the distribution chart above, one-day changes have fat tails – relatively extreme results that run afoul of a normal distribution. For a clearer view on this front, we can run a Q-Q plot, or quantile-quantile plot, which compares the empirical data (black circles) with a theoretical distribution – in this case a normal distribution (red line).

If SPY’s one-day returns were perfectly normal, they’d match the red line. That’s true for a substantial portion of the data set, but at the extremes there are clear divergences. On the left side, daily losses are much steeper than expected in a normal distribution. The opposite is true for relatively large gains.

A similar profile applies to the one-year results. The main takeaway: departures from the normal distribution suggest that forecasting, simulating and other modeling tasks can be improved by factoring in fat tails and other features applicable to non-normal distributions.

But opportunity is a two-sided coin. If you’re not going to use a normal distribution to model the data, which distribution is appropriate? There are several possibilities, and each comes with its own set of pros and cons. The challenge is that no matter which distribution model you select, it will be wrong in some degree. Despite decades of research, no one has yet identified or developed a distribution that perfect matches how equity returns vary in the real world.

That inspires some researchers to stick with the historical record, which relieves us of the need to select a specific model. But that leads to its own set of issues. Simulating returns based on the historical record is easy and arguably accurate, but there are challenges with deciding how to maintain the serial correlation of financial time series, for example.

Every time you solve one challenge in modeling market returns, risk and other facets of financial assets, you create another challenge. No surprise, then, that moving closer to a perfect model, while forever elusive, often requires modeling from multiple perspectives and perhaps using average results as a benchmark.

“All models are wrong, but some are useful,” the statistician George Box famously quipped. Deciding which ones are useful, or not, still involves a hefty dose of intuition and subjectivity. No matter how long you torture the data, it never tells you all the secrets you’re desperate to hear.


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By James Picerno