The excessive volatility of prices in financial markets is one of the most pressing puzzles in social science. It has led many to question economic theory, which attributes beneficial effects to markets in the allocation of risks and the aggregation of information. In exploring its causes, we investigated to what extent excessive volatility can be observed at the individual level. Economists claim that securities prices are forecasts of future outcomes. Here, we report on a simple experiment in which participants were rewarded to make the most accurate possible forecast of a canonical financial time series. We discovered excessive volatility in individual-level forecasts, paralleling the finding at the market level. Assuming that participan...
In this study, we analyze whether volatility forecasts (judgmental confidence intervals) are influen...
As a group, market forecasters are egregiously overconfident. In conformity to the dynamic model of ...
We conduct a learning to forecast asset pricing experiment that assumes that financial advisors and ...
The excessive volatility of prices in financial markets is one of the most pressing puzzles in socia...
Financial volatility obeys two fascinating empirical regularities that apply to various assets, on v...
Two of the most discussed anomalies in the financial literature are the predictability of excess ret...
Different forecasting behaviors affect investors’ trading decisions and lead to qualitatively differ...
The rational expectations (RE) hypothesis although elegant and useful requires demanding assumptions...
We find several interesting and intriguing results. First, results from our computer simulations rev...
Financial volatility obeys two fascinating empirical regularities that apply to various assets, on v...
We study the effects of the investment horizon on asset price volatility using a Learning to Forecas...
We present results of an experiment on expectation formation in an asset market. Participants in our...
International audienceIn this study, we investigate (a) whether eliciting future price forecasts inf...
In this study, we analyze whether volatility forecasts (judgmental confidence intervals) are influen...
In this study, we analyze whether volatility forecasts (judgmental confidence intervals) are influen...
As a group, market forecasters are egregiously overconfident. In conformity to the dynamic model of ...
We conduct a learning to forecast asset pricing experiment that assumes that financial advisors and ...
The excessive volatility of prices in financial markets is one of the most pressing puzzles in socia...
Financial volatility obeys two fascinating empirical regularities that apply to various assets, on v...
Two of the most discussed anomalies in the financial literature are the predictability of excess ret...
Different forecasting behaviors affect investors’ trading decisions and lead to qualitatively differ...
The rational expectations (RE) hypothesis although elegant and useful requires demanding assumptions...
We find several interesting and intriguing results. First, results from our computer simulations rev...
Financial volatility obeys two fascinating empirical regularities that apply to various assets, on v...
We study the effects of the investment horizon on asset price volatility using a Learning to Forecas...
We present results of an experiment on expectation formation in an asset market. Participants in our...
International audienceIn this study, we investigate (a) whether eliciting future price forecasts inf...
In this study, we analyze whether volatility forecasts (judgmental confidence intervals) are influen...
In this study, we analyze whether volatility forecasts (judgmental confidence intervals) are influen...
As a group, market forecasters are egregiously overconfident. In conformity to the dynamic model of ...
We conduct a learning to forecast asset pricing experiment that assumes that financial advisors and ...