Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk preferences to explain market behavior. We find that a measure, combining experiments rooted in expected utility theory and measures derived from surveys, explains spot and contractual sales, but does not exhibit substantially greater explanatory power than its underlying components. Survey-based measures are generally more significant indicators of marketing choices, but experimental measures reveal how risk attitudes vary over a range of probable outcomes, which is important in light of increased commodity price volatility. Given recently identified limitations on the applicability of expected utility theory, we suggest that researchers in...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected utility mod...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Researchers employ various measures of risk attitudes to investigate their relation to market behavi...
Researchers employ various measures of risk attitudes to investigate their relation to market behavi...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected utility mod...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected utility mod...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Despite extensive study, researchers continue to search for consistent and reliable measures of risk...
Researchers employ various measures of risk attitudes to investigate their relation to market behavi...
Researchers employ various measures of risk attitudes to investigate their relation to market behavi...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected utility mod...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected I utility m...
Two major approaches to measuring risk attitude are compared. One, based on the expected utility mod...