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Volume
1, Number 1, 2000 Abstracts
©
Copyright Erlbaum 2000
Thought
Contagions in the Stock Market
Aaron Lynch
The evolutionary
epidemiology of ideas, or thought contagion theory, is introduced and applied
to possible examples in the stock market. It is suggested that differences in transmissivity, receptivity, and longevity of belief may
contribute numerous irrational influences on the stock market, generating
sources of inefficiency. These include a wide variety of mechanisms that may
generate both positive and negative market overreactions. The soaring prices of
Internet stocks during 1998-1999 are used as an example of how investment ideas
correlating with new communication behaviors may affect share prices, and how
contagion effects in general can affect the broader market. New avenues of
empirical investigation are proposed to test the types of hypotheses presented.
Overreactions,
Momentum, Liquidity, and Price Bubbles in Laboratory and Field Stock Markets
Gunduz Caginalp
David Porter
Laboratory asset
markets provide an experimental setting in which to observe investor behavior.
Over more than a decade, numerous studies have found that participants in
laboratory experiments frequently drive asset prices far above fundamental
value, after which the prices crash. This bubble-and-crash behavior is robust
to variations in a number of variables, including liquidity (the amount of cash
available relative to the value of the assets being traded), short-selling,
certainty or uncertainty of dividend payments, brokerage fees, capital gains
taxes, buying on margin, and others. This paper attempts to model the behavior
of asset prices in experimental settings by proposing a "momentum
model" of asset price changes. The model assumes that investors follow a
combination of two factors when setting prices: fundamental value, and the
recent price trend. The predictions of the model, while still far from perfect,
are superior to those of a rational expectations model, in which traders
consider only fundamental value. In particular, the momentum model predicts
that higher levels of liquidity lead to larger price bubbles, a result that is
confirmed in the experiments. The similarity between laboratory results and
data from field (real-world) markets suggests that the momentum model may be
applicable there as well.
Measuring
Bubble Expectations and Investor Confidence
Robert J. Shiller
This paper
presents evidence on two types of investor attitudes that change in important
ways through time, with important consequences for speculative markets. The
paper explores changes in bubble expectations and investor confidence among
institutional investors in the
Based on the results of the questionnaires administered during the period, the author develops specific time-series indicators for each of the following: a speculative bubble (an unstable situation with expectations for a increase in the short term only), a negative speculative bubble (an unstable situation with expectations for a downturn in the short term only), and investor confidence (a feeling that nothing can go wrong).
Using the indicators, the author produces indexes indicating the average percentage of the population at a given time with bubble expectations, negative bubble expectations, and investor confidence, respectively.
Investor
Overreaction: Evidence That Its Basis Is Psychological
David N. Dreman
Eric A. Lufkin
Probably no subject in recent
financial literature has generated more controversy than whether investors
behave rationally in pricing stocks, or whether they overreact to market
information, resulting in prices being too high or too low. Although the
efficient market hypothesis states that, with minor exceptions, securities are
rationally priced, repeated evidence has been presented of predictable over-
and underreactions. This evidence is based primarily
on consistently higher returns for out-of-favor stocks and below-average
returns for favored issues. The existence of overreaction in the marketplace,
if it can be proven, is important to both investment decision-making and
theory, and in more acute cases can be the major cause of financial bubbles and
panics.
We present evidence of overreaction by showing that important fundamentals upon which securities prices depend demonstrate little movement in the face of major changes to the returns of favored and unfavored stocks. We can find no explanation other than psychological influences to account for this finding. The paper also provides evidence that over- and underreaction may be a part of the same process.
A Cat
Bond Premium Puzzle?
Vivek J. Bantwal
Howard C. Kunreuther
Catastrophe bonds,
the payouts of which are tied to the occurrence of natural disasters, offer
insurers and corporate entities the ability to hedge events that could
otherwise impair their operations to the point of insolvency. At the same time,
cat bonds offer investors a unique opportunity to enhance their portfolios with
an asset that provides a high-yielding return that is uncorrelated with the
market. Despite the attractive nature of these investments, spreads in this
market remain considerably higher than the spreads for comparable
speculative-grade debt. This article uses behavioral economics to explain the
reluctance of investment managers to invest in these products. Finally, we use
simulations to illustrate the attractiveness of cat bonds under a wide range of
outcomes, including the possible effects of model uncertainty on investor
appetite for these securities.
When
Cultures Collide: Social Security and the Market
William M. O'Barr
John M. Conley
In his 1999 State of the
Union address, President Clinton raised the possibility of investing social
security funds in the equities market. In this article, two anthropologists who
have studied the culture of the financial world assess the President's
proposal. The analysis focuses on the vast cultural gap between the
private-sector participants in the equities market and the federal bureaucrats
who would inevitably manage social security investments. The authors examine
similar arrangements at the state level, the cultural differences among the
entities involved, and how those differences interfere with fiduciary
decision-making. They conclude that the gap is simply too wide for the proposal
to be workable, and as a result, the adverse consequences likely outweigh the
potential benefits. Although some consequences are foreseeable, more
threatening consequences can be envisioned only in the most general terms.
Volume
1, Number 2, 2000 Abstracts
©
Copyright Erlbaum 2000
Thought
Contagions in the Stock Market
Aaron Lynch
The evolutionary
epidemiology of ideas, or thought contagion theory, is introduced and applied
to possible examples in the stock market. It is suggested that differences in transmissivity, receptivity, and longevity of belief may
contribute numerous irrational influences on the stock market, generating
sources of inefficiency. These include a wide variety of mechanisms that may
generate both positive and negative market overreactions. The soaring prices of
Internet stocks during 1998-1999 are used as an example of how investment ideas
correlating with new communication behaviors may affect share prices, and how
contagion effects in general can affect the broader market. New avenues of
empirical investigation are proposed to test the types of hypotheses presented.
Imagery,
Affect, and Financial Judgment
Donald G. MacGregor
Paul Slovic
David Dreman
Michael Berry
Traditional theories of finance posit that the pricing of securities in
financial markets should be done according to the quality of their underlying
technical fundamentals. However, research on financial markets has tended to
indicate that factors other than technical fundamentals are often used by
market participants to gauge the value of securities. This phenomenon may be
quite prevalent in markets for initial public offerings (IPOs), where
securities lack a financial history. The imagery and affect associated with
securities can be a powerful basis upon which to judge their worth. Advanced
business students in a securities analysis course were asked to evaluate a
number of industry groups represented on the New York Stock Exchange in terms
of a set of judgmental variables. After providing imagery and affective evaluations
for each industry group, the participants judged the likelihood that they would
invest in companies associated with each industry. Imagery and affective
ratings were highly correlated with one another and with the likelihood of
investing. Judgments of performance correlated poorly to moderately with actual
market performance as measured by weighted average returns for the industry
groups studied. The results suggest that imagery and affect are part of a
coherent psychological framework for evaluating classes of securities, but that
framework may have low validity for predicting performance.
Catastrophic
Risk and Securities Design
David Rode
Baruch Fischhoff
Paul Fischbeck
The anomalies, inefficiencies and difficulties in the market for
catastrophic bonds are so pronounced as to lead strongly to the inference that
psychological factors have a major impact on the pricing of these bonds, and on
the lack of acceptance they have en-countered from investors. In this article,
we examine major factors influencing the market for catastrophe bonds. Most of
the economic factors involved and considered either singly or in combination
are insufficient to account for the magnitude of the anomalies observed.
Decades ago, irregularities in the orbit of the planet Uranus allowed
astronomers to deduce the existence of another planet, subsequently named
Pluto. Since the economic forces at work in the marketplace cannot
satisfactorily explain the situation in the catastrophe-bond marketplace, we
infer that the gravitational pull of psychological forces is at work. We
discuss eight psychological dynamics that may influence the pricing,
mispricing, acceptance or lack of acceptance of catastrophe bonds.
Losses from catastrophic events represent an increasing problem for the property and casualty insurance industry. These losses have significant repercussions not only for insurance firms, but also for governmental policy makers and consumers in the insurance market. In principle, one way to deal with these risks is through securitizing them. Doing so would allow spreading risks of local disasters across global capital markets. However, previous attempts at securitizing insurance risks have, by most accounts, met with minimal success. This paper examines possible barriers to securitization, focusing on behavioral responses to such novel instruments. These barriers include the difficulties of conveying the associated risks, even to investors who are sophisticated about finance. Our analyses will draw on research in behavioral decision making and psychology. They will lead to proposals for empirical research and general strategies for making securities design more consonant with investor behavior.
Risk
Behavior of East and West Germans in Handling Personal Finances
Peter Tigges
Axel Riegert
Lothar Jonitz
Johannes Brengelmann
Rolf R. Engel
When "Homo Economicus" stands for
rationality of financial decision-making, then this is clearly an ideal state
not found in real life. Instead, everyday financial decisions are made by using
a number of risk-oriented behaviors, both positive and negative. We investigate
the relationships between such personality traits and financial decisions
following the theory of Brengelmann. We compare
financial risk behavior between East and West German citizens using two kinds
of samples. One type of sample is drawn from the general East and West German
populations. The other is drawn from the readers of the leading business
magazine in East and
Beyond
Behavioral Finance
Elton G. McGoun
Tatjana Skubic
Throughout its history, finance theory has made certain simplifying
assumptions regarding human behavior and concerned itself with whether the
implications of these assumptions were true and not with whether the
assumptions themselves were. Recently, however, more interest has been shown in
experimental investigation of these assumptions, and the resultant behavioral
finance has been presented as a significant departure from the current research
paradigm. Recent research in cognitive science, however, is finding that the
mind can and does work differently than traditional finance assumes, and the
differences between the behavioral assumptions of traditional finance and the
supposedly more realistic ones of today-s behavioral finance are frequently
superficial. Knowledge and knowing are likely to be profoundly different from
the forms in which we have incorporated them in our extant models, both
traditional and behavioral, and they differ in ways similar to those which, for
example, have differentiated corporations from corporate images in marketing.
To truly understand what is going on we must go beyond behavioral finance to
address these differences.
Thought
Contagion and Financial Economics: The Dividend Puzzle as a Case Study
George M. Frankfurter
Elton G. McGoun
In this paper we explore the connection between the theory of thought
contagion and the ways of thinking in financial economics. We argue that
financial economics became what it is today not by coincidence, or a
methodically optimal process in search of some universal truth that is
"out there," but by an organized campaign to inhibit thinking. We
show that much of financial economic thinking is influenced by the modes in
which this thought control takes place. We use the dividend puzzle, one of the
great enigmas of modern finance, as a case study to demonstrate the validity of
our thesis.
Volume
1, Number 3, 2000 Abstracts
©
Copyright Erlbaum 2000
EDITORIAL
COMMENTARY
The
Old Psychology Behind "New Metrics" Cash Flow Is King? Cognitive
Errors by Investors
Todd Houge
Tim Loughran
When investors fixate on current earnings, they commit a cognitive error
and fail to fully value the information contained in accruals and cash flows.
Extending the accrual anomaly documented by Sloan [1996], we identify
significant excess returns from a cash flow-based trading strategy. The market
consistently underestimates the transitory nature of accruals and the long-term
persistence of cash flows. We find that the accrual anomaly derives from the
poor performance of high accrual firms, which are more likely to manage
earnings. Combining the accrual and cash flow information also reveals that
investors misvalue the quality of earnings. Contrary
to Fama [1998], these anomalies are robust to the
three-factor model with equally or value-weighted portfolio returns.
Home Bias
in International Stock Return Expectations
Michael Kilka
Martin Weber
Despite the advantages of international portfolio diversification, actual
equity portfolio holdings reveal a strong bias towards domestic stocks. One
hypothesis is that this bias can be explained by stock return expectations
expressed in probability judgments. To test that hypothesis and to analyze the
underlying effects that might cause distortions in investors’ expectations, we
conducted a cross country study in
The New
Economy Creed: A Case of Thought Contagion
G. Glenn Baigent
William Acar
This paper looks at recent market-related events and the contention, gradually
gaining credence in business circles, that we have entered an age of a New
Economy. According to the New Economy view, the present upswing in the stock
market will, at least in the
We attempt to take a dispassionate look at the New Economy thesis, so as to
provide an explanation for some of the strange phenomena associated with this
decade’s fixation on the stock market and financial rationality. We analyse the paradox of the belief in a one-way swing of the
economic pendulum in terms of market fundamentals as well as investor
sentiment, or potential irrationality. Our analysis confirms the early insights
of Keynes and more recent views of Black. We conclude by formulating a few
caveats for the true believers of this emerging "New Economy creed"
as well as for its cynical detractors.
Market Efficiency or Behavioral Finance: The
Nature of the Debate
George M. Frankfurter
Elton G. McGoun
Academic finance (also known as financial economics) espouses a methodology
that has been largely discredited (or, at the very least, challenged) in all
other disciplines, not to mention the philosophy of science itself. And this
methodology is so ingrained that it is rarely even addressed, let alone
seriously debated. The term behavioral finance, which ought to be applied to a
different, more experimental methodological approach to finance, is instead applied
to a set of papers that make slightly different assumptions in their
mathematics/statistics without even using different methods.
Risk
Aversion and the Investment Horizon: A New Perspective on the Time
Diversification Debate
Sanjiv Jaggia
Satish Thosar
Investment managers generally subscribe to the principle of time
diversification. This implies that a larger portion of the portfolio should be
devoted to risky assets as the investment horizon increases. In contrast,
academics have shown that for investors with utility functions characterized by
constant relative risk aversion, the optimal asset-allocation strategy is
independent of the investment horizon. The relative risk aversion in these
studies is assumed to be constant both with respect to wealth as well as
investment horizon. We suggest a utility function that explicitly captures the
notion that individuals are more risk tolerant when the investment horizon is
long, thereby validating the intuitively appealing time diversification
argument.