Extent:
Online Ressource (2592 KB, 496 S.)
Series:
Type of publication: Book / Working Paper
Language: English
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (p. [457]-471) and index
Cover; Contents; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Why Read This Book?; 1.2 Organization: How the Ideas in This Book Tie Together; 1.3 Summary; Part I - Heuristics and Representativeness: Experimental Evidence; 2 Representativeness and Bayes Rule: Psychological Perspective; 2.1 Explaining Representativeness; 2.2 Implications for Bayes Rule; 2.3 Experiment; 2.4 Representativeness and Prediction; 2.5 Summary; 3 Representativeness and Bayes Rule: Economics Perspective; 3.1 The Grether Experiment; 3.2 Representativeness; 3.3 Results; 3.4 Summary; 4 A Simple Asset Pricing Model Featuring Representativeness
4.1 First Stage, Modified Experimental Structure4.2 Expected Utility Model; 4.3 Equilibrium Prices; 4.4 Representativeness; 4.5 Second Stage: Signal-Based Market Structure; 4.6 Summary; 5 Heterogeneous Judgments in Experiments; 5.1 Grether Experiment; 5.2 Heterogeneity in Predictions of GPA; 5.3 The De Bondt Experiment; 5.4 Why Some Bet on Trends and Others Commit Gambler's Fallacy; 5.5 Summary; Part II - Heuristics and Representativeness: Investor Expectations; 6 Representativeness and Heterogeneous Beliefs Among Individual Investors, Financial Executives, and Academics
6.1 Individual Investors6.2 The Expectations of Academic Economists; 6.3 Financial Executives; 6.4 Summary; 7 Representativeness and Heterogeneity in the Judgments of Professional Investors; 7.1 Contrasting Predictions: How Valid?; 7.2 Update to Livingston Survey; 7.3 Individual Forecasting Records; 7.4 Gambler's Fallacy; 7.5 Why Heterogeneity Is Time Varying; 7.6 Summary; Part III - Developing Behavioral Asset Pricing Models; 8 A Simple Asset Pricing Model with Heterogeneous Beliefs; 8.1 A Simple Model with Two Investors; 8.2 Equilibrium Prices; 8.3 Fixed Optimism and Pessimism
8.4 Incorporating Representativeness8.5 Summary; 9 Heterogeneous Beliefs and Inefficient Markets; 9.1 Defining Market Efficiency; 9.2 Market Efficiency and Logarithmic Utility; 9.3 Equilibrium Prices as Aggregators; 9.4 Market Efficiency: Necessary and Sufficient Condition; 9.5 Interpreting the Efficiency Condition; 9.6 Summary; 10 A Simple Market Model of Prices and Trading Volume; 10.1 The Model; 10.2 Analysis of Returns; 10.3 Analysis of Trading Volume; 10.4 Example; 10.5 Arbitrage; 10.6 Summary; 11 Efficiency and Entropy: Long-Run Dynamics; 11.1 Introductory Example; 11.2 Entropy
11.3 Numerical Illustration11.4 Markov Beliefs; 11.5 Heterogeneous Time Preference, Entropy, and Efficiency; 11.6 Entropy and Market Efficiency; 11.7 Summary; Part IV - Heterogeneity in Risk Tolerance and Time Discounting; 12 CRRA and CARA Utility Functions; 12.1 Arrow-Pratt Measure; 12.2 Proportional Risk; 12.3 Constant Relative Risk Aversion; 12.4 Logarithmic Utility; 12.5 CRRA Demand Function; 12.6 Representative Investor; 12.7 Example; 12.8 CARA Utility; 12.9 Summary; 13 Heterogeneous Risk Tolerance and Time Preference; 13.1 Survey Evidence; 13.2 Extended Survey; 13.3 Time Preference
13.4 Summary
Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
ISBN: 0-12-639371-0 ; 0-08-047603-1 ; 978-0-08-047603-2 ; 978-0-12-639371-2
Source:
ECONIS - Online Catalogue of the ZBW
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012674398