The equity premium puzzle and the risk-free rate puzzle
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
The Equity Premium Puzzle and the Risk-free Rate Puzzle
This paper studies the implications for general equilibnum asset pricing of a class of Kreps-Porteus nonexpected utility preferences characterized by a constant intertemporal elasticity of substitution and a constant, but unrelated, coefficient of relative risk aversion. It is shown that relaxing the parametric restriction on tastes imposed by the time-additive expected utility specification do...
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Restrictions that a class of general equilibrium models place upon the average returns of equity and Treasury bills are found to be strongly violated by the U.S. data in the 1889-1978 period. This result is robust to model specification and measurement problems. We conclude that, most likely, an equilibrium model which is not an Arrow-Debreu economy will be the one that Simultaneously rationali...
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Recent tests of stochastic dominance of several orders proposed by Linton, Maasoumi and Whang (2003) are applied to reexamine the equity premium puzzle. An advantage of this nonparametric framework is that it provides a means to assess whether the existence of a premium is due to particular cardinal choices of either the utility function or the underlying returns distribution, or both. The appr...
متن کاملCash Flow Risk, Discounting Risk, and the Equity Premium Puzzle
This article investigates the impact of cash flow risk and discounting risk on the aggregate equity premium. Our approach is based on the idea that consumption is hard to measure empirically, so if we substitute out an empirically difficult-to-estimate marginal utility by a pricing kernel of observables, we can evaluate the empirical performance of an equilibrium asset pricing model in a differ...
متن کاملAnchoring Heuristic and the Equity Premium Puzzle
I model a scenario in which investors do not know the payoff distributions of relatively newer firms and use the payoff distribution of similar well-established firms as starting points. The starting distributions are then adjusted for size, volatility, and other differences. Anchoring bias (Tversky and Kahneman (1974)) implies that such adjustments typically fall short. I show that adjusting c...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Journal of Monetary Economics
سال: 1989
ISSN: 0304-3932
DOI: 10.1016/0304-3932(89)90028-7