Time Diversification and Security Preferences: A Stochastic Dominance Analysis.
We use stochastic dominance to test whether investors should prefer riskier securities as the investment horizon lengthens. Return distributions for stocks, bonds, and U.S. Treasury bills are generated for holding periods of one to 25 years by simulation. For each holding period, stochastic dominance tests are run to establish preferences between the alternative security classes. Contrary to previous mean-variance based studies, we find no evidence that high-risk securities (stocks) dominate low-risk securities (bonds, Treasury bills) as the investment horizon lengthens. However, we do find that corporate bonds systematically dominate government bonds. Copyright 1996 by Kluwer Academic Publishers
Year of publication: |
1996
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Authors: | Hodges, Charles W ; Yoder, James A |
Published in: |
Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting. - Springer. - Vol. 7.1996, 3, p. 289-98
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Publisher: |
Springer |
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