Strict universality of the square-root law in price impact across stocks: a complete survey of the Tokyo stock exchange
Yuki Sato, Kiyoshi Kanazawa

TL;DR
This study provides high-precision, comprehensive evidence supporting the universality of the square-root law in price impact across all stocks and traders on the Tokyo Stock Exchange over eight years.
Contribution
It conclusively demonstrates the strict universality of the square-root law in price impact using complete microscopic trading data, refuting models that suggest nonuniversality.
Findings
The exponent δ is approximately 1/2 for all stocks and traders.
The study rejects models supporting nonuniversality of the price impact law.
High-precision measurements confirm the universality hypothesis.
Abstract
Universal power laws have been scrutinised in physics and beyond, and a long-standing debate exists in econophysics regarding the strict universality of the nonlinear price impact, commonly referred to as the square-root law (SRL). The SRL posits that the average price impact follows a power law with respect to transaction volume , such that with . Some researchers argue that the exponent should be system-specific, without universality. Conversely, others contend that should be exactly for all stocks across all countries, implying universality. However, resolving this debate requires high-precision measurements of with errors of around across hundreds of stocks, which has been extremely challenging due to the scarcity of large microscopic datasets -- those that enable tracking the trading…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinancial Markets and Investment Strategies
