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Ambiguity in Asset Markets: Theory and Experiment

Peter Bossaerts1,2; Paolo Ghirardato3; Serena Guarnaschelli4; William R. Zame5

1 California Institute of Technology · 2 École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne · 3 Collegio Carlo Alberto · 4 McKinsey & Company (United States) · 5 University of California, Los Angeles

Review of Financial Studies 2010

This paper studies the impact of ambiguity and ambiguity aversion on equilibrium asset prices and portfolio holdings in competitive financial markets. It argues that attitudes toward ambiguity are heterogeneous across the population, just as attitudes toward risk are heterogeneous across the population, but that heterogeneity of attitudes toward ambiguity has different implications than heterogeneity of attitudes toward risk. In pa rticular, when some state probabilities are not known, agents who are sufficiently ambiguity averse find open sets of prices for which they refuse to hold an ambiguous portfolio. This suggests a different cross section of portfolio choices, a wider range of state price/probability ratios, and different rankings of state price/probability ratios than would be predicted if state probabilities were known. Experiments confirm all of these suggestions. Our findings contradict the claim that investors who have cognitive biases do not affect prices because they are inframarginal: ambiguity-averse investors have an indirect effect on prices because they change the per capita amount of risk that is to be shared among the marginal investors. Our experimental data also suggest a positive correlation between risk aversion and ambiguity aversion that might explain the “value effect” in historical data.

DOI
10.1093/rfs/hhp106
Volume
23 (4)
Pages
1325-1359
Language
en
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