Contrary to the prediction of the standard portfolio diversification theory, many investors place a large fraction of their stock investment in a small number of stocks. I show that underdiversification may be caused by solvency requirements. My model predicts that for quite general preferences and return distributions: (1) underdiversification decreases in dis-cretionary wealth; and (2) expected return and covariance determine which stocks to invest in, but variance, higher moments, and Sharpe ratio do not matter for this choice. In addition, a less-diversified stock portfolio has a higher expected return, a higher volatility, and a higher skewness, and idiosyncratic risks are priced. I
In this paper, we provide a general valuation of the diversification attitude of investors. First, w...
We examine returns and ending wealth in portfolios selected from 1,000 large U.S. stocks over a 20-y...
In this paper we develop a model of intertemporal portfolio choice where an investor accounts explic...
We develop a one-period model of investor asset holdings where investors have heterogeneous preferen...
Investor diversification and the pricing of idiosyncratic risk Theories predict that, due to investo...
The paper analyses on an experimental basis the phenomenon of non-optimal under-diversification in p...
textabstractActual portfolios contain fewer stocks than are implied by standard financial analysis t...
This paper analyzes the relationship between diversification and several distributional characterist...
Individual investors hold a fraction of their equity portfolio in a highly-diversified mutual fund a...
One of the fundamental principles in portfolio selection models is minimization of risk through dive...
Diversification—investing in imperfectly correlated assets—reduces volatility without sacrificing ex...
Investors underdiversify because of solvency constraints and preferences for lottery-type outcomes. ...
The discrete-time dynamic investment model, using only historical data in various asset-allocation s...
The two opposing investment strategies, diversification and concentration, have often been directly ...
In this Paper we develop a model of intertemporal portfolio choice where an investor accounts explic...
In this paper, we provide a general valuation of the diversification attitude of investors. First, w...
We examine returns and ending wealth in portfolios selected from 1,000 large U.S. stocks over a 20-y...
In this paper we develop a model of intertemporal portfolio choice where an investor accounts explic...
We develop a one-period model of investor asset holdings where investors have heterogeneous preferen...
Investor diversification and the pricing of idiosyncratic risk Theories predict that, due to investo...
The paper analyses on an experimental basis the phenomenon of non-optimal under-diversification in p...
textabstractActual portfolios contain fewer stocks than are implied by standard financial analysis t...
This paper analyzes the relationship between diversification and several distributional characterist...
Individual investors hold a fraction of their equity portfolio in a highly-diversified mutual fund a...
One of the fundamental principles in portfolio selection models is minimization of risk through dive...
Diversification—investing in imperfectly correlated assets—reduces volatility without sacrificing ex...
Investors underdiversify because of solvency constraints and preferences for lottery-type outcomes. ...
The discrete-time dynamic investment model, using only historical data in various asset-allocation s...
The two opposing investment strategies, diversification and concentration, have often been directly ...
In this Paper we develop a model of intertemporal portfolio choice where an investor accounts explic...
In this paper, we provide a general valuation of the diversification attitude of investors. First, w...
We examine returns and ending wealth in portfolios selected from 1,000 large U.S. stocks over a 20-y...
In this paper we develop a model of intertemporal portfolio choice where an investor accounts explic...