We test whether probability weighting affects household portfolio choice in a representative survey. On average, people display inverse-S shaped probability weighting, overweighting low probability events. As theory predicts, probability weighting is positively associated with portfolio underdiversification and significant Sharpe ratio losses. Analyzing respondents’ individual stock holdings, we find higher probability weighting is associated with owning lottery-type stocks and positively-skewed equity portfolios. People with higher probability weighting are less likely to own mutual funds and more likely to either avoid equities or hold individual stocks. We are the first to empirically link individuals’ elicited probability weighting and ...
We derive from a sample of US households the distribution of the risk aversion implicit in their por...
The focus of this contribution is on the transformation of objective probability, which in Prospect ...
It is well known that individuals treat losses and gains differently and there exists non-linearity ...
We test whether probability weighting affects household portfolio choice in a representative survey....
Probability weighting, the overweighting of small probabilities and underweighting of large probabi...
Households with familiarity biases tilt their portfolios toward a few risky assets. The resulting me...
When valuing risky prospects, people typically overweight small probabilities and underweight medium...
We test the relation between ambiguity aversion and five household portfolio choice puzzles: non-par...
Non-linear probability weighting is an integral part of descriptive theories of choice under risk su...
This article provides a theoretical account and identifies boundary conditions for the common belief...
We develop a life-cycle consumption and portfolio choice model in which households have nonhomotheti...
Evidence shows that (i) people overweight low probabilities and underweight high probabilities, but ...
Economic theory suggests that households should invest their financial wealth in a combination of ca...
The paper develops measures of home bias for 48 countries over the period 2001 to 2011 by employing ...
We analyze whether relative risk aversion varies with wealth. We first derive theoretical prediction...
We derive from a sample of US households the distribution of the risk aversion implicit in their por...
The focus of this contribution is on the transformation of objective probability, which in Prospect ...
It is well known that individuals treat losses and gains differently and there exists non-linearity ...
We test whether probability weighting affects household portfolio choice in a representative survey....
Probability weighting, the overweighting of small probabilities and underweighting of large probabi...
Households with familiarity biases tilt their portfolios toward a few risky assets. The resulting me...
When valuing risky prospects, people typically overweight small probabilities and underweight medium...
We test the relation between ambiguity aversion and five household portfolio choice puzzles: non-par...
Non-linear probability weighting is an integral part of descriptive theories of choice under risk su...
This article provides a theoretical account and identifies boundary conditions for the common belief...
We develop a life-cycle consumption and portfolio choice model in which households have nonhomotheti...
Evidence shows that (i) people overweight low probabilities and underweight high probabilities, but ...
Economic theory suggests that households should invest their financial wealth in a combination of ca...
The paper develops measures of home bias for 48 countries over the period 2001 to 2011 by employing ...
We analyze whether relative risk aversion varies with wealth. We first derive theoretical prediction...
We derive from a sample of US households the distribution of the risk aversion implicit in their por...
The focus of this contribution is on the transformation of objective probability, which in Prospect ...
It is well known that individuals treat losses and gains differently and there exists non-linearity ...