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We use the portfolio selection model presented in He and Zhou [<italic>Manage. Sci.</italic>, 2011, <bold>57</bold>, 315-331] and the NYSE equity and US treasury bond returns for the period 1926-1990 to revisit Benartzi and Thaler's myopic loss aversion theory. Through an extensive empirical study, we find that in addition...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010976217
We formulate and carry out an analytical treatment of a single-period portfolio choice model featuring a reference point in wealth, S-shaped utility (value) functions with loss aversion, and probability weighting under Kahneman and Tversky's cumulative prospect theory (CPT). We introduce a new...
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Abstract Starting from the requirement that risk of financial portfolios should be measured in terms of their losses, not their gains, we define the notion of loss-based risk measure and study the properties of this class of risk measures. We characterize convex loss-based risk measures by a...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10014622238
An investor holding a stock needs to decide when to sell it over a given investment horizon. It is tempting to think that she should sell at the maximum price over the entire horizon, which is however impossible to achieve. A close yet realistic goal is to sell the stock at a time when the...
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In this paper, we continue our study on a general time-inconsistent stochastic linear--quadratic (LQ) control problem originally formulated in [6]. We derive a necessary and sufficient condition for equilibrium controls via a flow of forward--backward stochastic differential equations. When the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011240726
This paper concerns a class of similinear stochastic partial differential equations, of which the drift term is a second-order differential operator plus a nonlinearity, and the diffusion term is a first-order differential operator. When the nonlinearity is only continuous in the state, it is...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10008874901