We present an extrapolative model of bubbles. In the model, many investors form their demand for a risky asset by weighing two signals—an average of the asset’s past price changes and the asset’s degree of overvaluation. The two signals are in conflict, and investors “waver ” over time in the relative weight they put on them. The model predicts that good news about fundamentals can trigger large price bubbles. We analyze the patterns of cash-flow news that generate the largest bubbles, the reasons why bubbles collapse, and the frequency with which they occur. The model also predicts that bubbles will be accompanied by high trading volume, and that volume increases with past asset returns. We present empirical evidence that bears on some of ...
The aim of this paper is to provide one potential theoretical explanation for questions how asset bu...
We analyze bubbles and crashes in a model in which some investors are partially sophisticated. While...
Usually financial crises go along with bubbles in asset prices, such as the housing bubble in the US...
We present an extrapolative model of bubbles. In the model, many investors form their demand for a r...
We propose an extrapolative model of bubbles to explain the sharp rise in prices and volume observed...
This paper characterizes systematic risk stemming from the possible occurrence of price bubbles and ...
Sentiment and extrapolation are ubiquitous in the financial market, and they are not only the embodi...
textabstractBubbles can persist because investors are better off riding bubbles. We define bubbles in...
We construct a model of asset market exuberance, collapse and recovery using subjective investor-bas...
We inspect the price volatility before, during, and after financial asset bubbles in orderto uncover...
One can define a bubble as a persistent increase in the price of an asset over and above its fundame...
It is common knowledge that the more prices deviate from fundamentals, the more likely it is for pri...
We inspect the price volatility before, during, and after financial asset bubbles in orderto uncover...
Usually financial crises go along with bubbles in asset prices, such as the housing bubble in the US...
We inspect the price volatility before, during, and after financial asset bubbles in orderto uncover...
The aim of this paper is to provide one potential theoretical explanation for questions how asset bu...
We analyze bubbles and crashes in a model in which some investors are partially sophisticated. While...
Usually financial crises go along with bubbles in asset prices, such as the housing bubble in the US...
We present an extrapolative model of bubbles. In the model, many investors form their demand for a r...
We propose an extrapolative model of bubbles to explain the sharp rise in prices and volume observed...
This paper characterizes systematic risk stemming from the possible occurrence of price bubbles and ...
Sentiment and extrapolation are ubiquitous in the financial market, and they are not only the embodi...
textabstractBubbles can persist because investors are better off riding bubbles. We define bubbles in...
We construct a model of asset market exuberance, collapse and recovery using subjective investor-bas...
We inspect the price volatility before, during, and after financial asset bubbles in orderto uncover...
One can define a bubble as a persistent increase in the price of an asset over and above its fundame...
It is common knowledge that the more prices deviate from fundamentals, the more likely it is for pri...
We inspect the price volatility before, during, and after financial asset bubbles in orderto uncover...
Usually financial crises go along with bubbles in asset prices, such as the housing bubble in the US...
We inspect the price volatility before, during, and after financial asset bubbles in orderto uncover...
The aim of this paper is to provide one potential theoretical explanation for questions how asset bu...
We analyze bubbles and crashes in a model in which some investors are partially sophisticated. While...
Usually financial crises go along with bubbles in asset prices, such as the housing bubble in the US...