In this paper, we drive an equilibrium in which some investors buy call/put options on the market portfolio while others sell them. Also, some investors supply and others demand forward contracts. Since investors are assumed to have similar risk-averse preferences, the demand for these contracts is not explained by differences in the shape of utility functions. Rather, it is the degree tow which agents face other, non-hedgeable, background risks that determines their risk-taking behavior in the model. We show that investors with low or no background risk have a concave sharing rule, i.e., they sell options on the market portfolio, whereas investors with high background risk have a convex sharing rule and buy these options. A general increas...
∗ Preliminary draft, don’t quote without permission 2 The paper examines how background risk can aff...
We empirically study the economic benefits of giving investors access to index options in the contex...
It is widely believed that call options induce risk-taking behavior. However, Ross (2004) challenges...
In this paper, we derive an equilibrium in which some investors buy call/put options on the market p...
In this paper, we drive an equilibrium in which some investors buy call/put options on the market po...
This note presents three results closely related to Franke, Stapleton and Subrahmanyams work (11) on...
In this paper we first show that call options, together with the market portfolio, are sufficient to...
We study the interaction between contracting and equilibrium pricing when risk- averse hedgers purch...
We empirically study the economic benefits of giving investors access to index op-tions in the conte...
We establish a necessary and sufficient condition for the risk aversion of an agent’s derived utilit...
Portfolio choice and the implied asset pricing are usually derived assuming maximization of expected...
SIGLEAvailable from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-2410...
This paper investigates the preference restrictions which underlie the Black-Scholes (log-normal), B...
In this paper, we assume that investors have the same information, but trade due to the evolution of...
This paper attempts to establish the existence of equilibrium, in an asset market inhabited by two r...
∗ Preliminary draft, don’t quote without permission 2 The paper examines how background risk can aff...
We empirically study the economic benefits of giving investors access to index options in the contex...
It is widely believed that call options induce risk-taking behavior. However, Ross (2004) challenges...
In this paper, we derive an equilibrium in which some investors buy call/put options on the market p...
In this paper, we drive an equilibrium in which some investors buy call/put options on the market po...
This note presents three results closely related to Franke, Stapleton and Subrahmanyams work (11) on...
In this paper we first show that call options, together with the market portfolio, are sufficient to...
We study the interaction between contracting and equilibrium pricing when risk- averse hedgers purch...
We empirically study the economic benefits of giving investors access to index op-tions in the conte...
We establish a necessary and sufficient condition for the risk aversion of an agent’s derived utilit...
Portfolio choice and the implied asset pricing are usually derived assuming maximization of expected...
SIGLEAvailable from Bibliothek des Instituts fuer Weltwirtschaft, ZBW, Duesternbrook Weg 120, D-2410...
This paper investigates the preference restrictions which underlie the Black-Scholes (log-normal), B...
In this paper, we assume that investors have the same information, but trade due to the evolution of...
This paper attempts to establish the existence of equilibrium, in an asset market inhabited by two r...
∗ Preliminary draft, don’t quote without permission 2 The paper examines how background risk can aff...
We empirically study the economic benefits of giving investors access to index options in the contex...
It is widely believed that call options induce risk-taking behavior. However, Ross (2004) challenges...