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Hong and Kacperczyk (2009, The price of sin: The effects of social norms on markets. Journal of Financial Economics 93(1), 15–36) document that “sin stocks” (alcohol, tobacco, and gambling) earn relatively high returns on a risk-adjusted basis. We revisit their original study with an...
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Does buying a stock bias one’s expectations about its future value? We find experimental evidence that it does. First, in a laboratory experiment, we elicit peoples’ price predictions for simulated stocks and compare them to the Bayesian benchmark. Then, in a second experiment, we elicit...
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measure between Gaussian fuzzy sets, we propose a bounded confidence fuzzy opinion network (BCFON) to model the social …
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013003998
Whether Federal Reserve Bank presidents have the right to vote on the U.S. monetary policy committee depends on a mechanical, yearly rotation scheme. Rotation is without exclusion: also nonvoting presidents attend and participate in the meetings of the committee. Does voting status change...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012545129
Whether Federal Reserve Bank presidents have the right to vote on the U.S. monetary policy committee depends on a mechanical, yearly rotation scheme. Rotation is without exclusion: also nonvoting presidents attend and participate in the meetings of the committee. Does voting status change...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012547590
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