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Finance - SS200 Behavioural Economics - 3 March 2004 by Martin Barner
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Papers Hirschleifer (2001): ”Investor Psychology and Asset Pricing”. Barberis & Thaler (2003): ”A Survey of Behavioral Finance”.
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Agenda Introduction to behavioural finance, Have a closer look at limits to arbitrage. Violations of the Efficiency Market Hypothesis – one of the cornerstones in modern finance. Experiment on arbitrage in asset markets. Conclusions and perspectives.
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Motivation The Efficiency Market Hypothesis was consensus in finance – Fama (1970). o Prices fully reflect all available information Merton: If you had invested $1 in 1926 in one-month US Treasury bills (and reinvested every month), the investment would by 1996 be worth $14. If you on the other hand had invested $1 in S&P500, the amount would have grown to $1,370. o This is essentially the equity premium puzzle What if you invested optimal?
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Overview of behavioral finance Question rationality Two building blocks: Limits to arbitrage Psychology o Prospect theory o Disposition effect o Mental accounting o House money effect
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Figure 1: - from Lamont & Thaler (2003),
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Figure 2: - from Froot & Dabora (1999),
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Figure 3: - from Lee, Shleifer & Thaler (1991),
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Experiment on Arbitrage Rietz (2003): ”Trader Behavior, Arbitrage and Efficiency in Experimental Asset Markets”. Basic setup. o Oral double auction o !0 subjects doing 15 periods á 5-7 minutes o Two types of subjects and two asset (+cash). How to test arbitrage opportunities. Dynamics of price movement
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Conclusion Clear violations of the efficiency market hypothesis as shown by the limits to arbitrage. Is it the iceberg?
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Behavioural perspectives At the beginning of a research field Research is boundedly rational too! o Interplay between limits to arbitrage and cognitive biases. Competing behavioural explanations o A weakness? o How to compare alternative theories: Empirical tests Laboratory experiments
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