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The aim of this paper is to show, within the mean-variance framework, how the market belief can be constructed as the result of the aggregation of heterogeneous beliefs and how the market equilibrium prices of risky assets can thus be determined. The heterogeneous beliefs are defined in terms of...
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This paper considers a discrete-time model of a financial market with one risky asset and one risk-free asset, where the asset price and wealth dynamics is determined by the interaction of two groups of agents, fundamentalists and trend extrapolators. In each period each group allocates its...
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Corporations in most countries are run by controlling shareholders whose cash flow rights are substantially smaller than their control rights in the firm. This separation of ownership and control allows the controlling shareholders to pursue private benefits at the cost of outside minority...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005170556
Using standard preferences for asset pricing has not been very successful to match asset price characteristics such as the risk-free interest rate, equity premium and the Sharpe ratio to time series data. Behavioral finance has recently proposed more realistic preferences such as preferences...
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This paper studies a financial market in which heterogeneous investors with multiperiod planning horizons of arbitrary finite length interact dynamically. Assumptions on individual preferences and subjective expectations are provided under which asset demand functions and market clearing prices...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005706546
We consider an infinite horizon exchange economy with incomplete markets and default. As in Geanakoplos and Zame (1998) financial securities are traded if the promises associated with them are backed by collateral. The only collateral available in our economy are shares of Lucas trees. We prove...
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