The abundance of high-frequency financial data and the rapid
development of computer hardware have combined to transform
financial economics into, arguably, the most empirically oriented
field within the social sciences. At the same time, as a result of
the difficulty of conducting genuine market experiments, empirical
finance remains firmly grounded in the tradition of model-driven
statistical inference that is characteristic of economics. Even so,
the richness of data has often spurred a practical orientation that
is more familiar in the natural sciences. The combination has proved
fertile, leading to the classification of a set of loosely connected
empirical topics as a distinct entity, financial
econometrics.