Asset price formation and behavioral biases
Authored by Todd Feldman, Gabriele Lepori
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1108/rbf-05-2015-0020
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine the debate on whether
psychology affects asset prices using agent-based modeling.
Design/methodology/approach - The authors set up three simulation
regimes where the first regime contains fundamental investors who invest
based on the mean-variance framework. The second regime includes purely
irrational investors who invest based on behavioral biases. The third
regime combines the two types of investors. The authors test whether the
return properties from regime 3 converge to that of regime 1 or 2.
Findings - Results suggest that the type of irrationality affects return
properties in different ways. Irrational investors who are introspective
in their irrationality, only examining their performance and
deficiencies, do not have much of a systematic effect on stock returns
when combined with rational investors. However, irrational investors
that aggregate information in an irrational manner have a systematic
effect when combined with rational investors.
Research limitations/implications - Research implication of using
simulation analysis is that the results need to be verified via other
methods such as empirical and/or experimental analysis.
Practical implications - Practical implications of the research is that
policy makers can look for factors that investors use to aggregate to
better understand the movement of financial prices and ignore other
factors.
Social implications - Social implication is that mass psychology impacts
financial prices.
Originality/value - No other paper has used agent-based/behavioral
analysis to better understand how different types of behavior may impact
financial prices in different ways.
Tags
bubbles
Model
Heterogeneous beliefs
Crashes
Individual investors