Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7359247 Journal of Economic Theory 2018 24 Pages PDF
Abstract
Consumption-based asset-pricing models have experienced success in recent years by augmenting the consumption process in 'exotic' ways. Two notable examples are the Long-Run Risk and rare disaster frameworks. Such models are difficult to characterize from consumption data alone. Accordingly, concerns have been raised regarding their specification. Acknowledging that both phenomena are naturally subject to ambiguity, we show that an ambiguity-averse agent may behave as if Long-Run Risk and disasters exist even if they do not or exaggerate them if they do. Consequently, prices may be misleading in characterizing these phenomena since they encode a pessimistic perspective of the data-generating process.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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