Two behavioral concepts, loss aversion and mental accounting, have recently been combined to provide a theoretical explanation of the equity premium puzzle. Recent experimental evidence suggests that undergraduate students' behavior is consistent with this "myopic loss aversion" conjecture. Our suspicion is that, much like certain anomalies in the realm of riskless decisions, these behavioral tendencies will be severely attenuated when real market players are put to the task. Making use of a unique subject pool-professional futures and options pit traders recruited from the Chicago Board of Trade-we do find behavioral differences between professionals and students. Yet, rather than discovering that the anomaly disappears, the data sugge...
We report results from an asset market experiment, in which we investigate the relationship between ...
The paper replicates the study of Benartzi and Thaler (1995), who sug- gest a behavioral explanation...
Standard finance theory portrays investors as rational utility maximisers. Persisting market anomali...
Two behavioral concepts, loss aversion and mental accounting, have recently been combined to provide...
Two behavioral concepts, loss aversion and mental accounting, have been combined to provide a theore...
Two concepts from behavioural economics, loss aversion and mental accounting, have been combined to ...
The equity premium puzzle refers to the empirical fact that stocks have outperformed bonds over the ...
Myopic loss aversion is the combination of a greater sensitivity to losses than to gains and a tende...
Myopic loss aversion was suggested byBenartzi and Thaler (1995)as an explanation for the equity prem...
Examining myopic loss aversion (MLA [Benartzi, S., Thaler, R., 1995. Myopic loss aversion and the eq...
The objective of this study is to investigate how professional traders in futures and options market...
Prospect theory is widely viewed as the best available descriptive model of how people evaluate risk...
Investors who are more willing to accept risks when evaluating their investments less frequently are...
Prospect theory is widely viewed as the best available descriptive model of how people evaluate risk...
We examine in an experiment the causes, consequences and possible cures of myopic loss aversion (MLA...
We report results from an asset market experiment, in which we investigate the relationship between ...
The paper replicates the study of Benartzi and Thaler (1995), who sug- gest a behavioral explanation...
Standard finance theory portrays investors as rational utility maximisers. Persisting market anomali...
Two behavioral concepts, loss aversion and mental accounting, have recently been combined to provide...
Two behavioral concepts, loss aversion and mental accounting, have been combined to provide a theore...
Two concepts from behavioural economics, loss aversion and mental accounting, have been combined to ...
The equity premium puzzle refers to the empirical fact that stocks have outperformed bonds over the ...
Myopic loss aversion is the combination of a greater sensitivity to losses than to gains and a tende...
Myopic loss aversion was suggested byBenartzi and Thaler (1995)as an explanation for the equity prem...
Examining myopic loss aversion (MLA [Benartzi, S., Thaler, R., 1995. Myopic loss aversion and the eq...
The objective of this study is to investigate how professional traders in futures and options market...
Prospect theory is widely viewed as the best available descriptive model of how people evaluate risk...
Investors who are more willing to accept risks when evaluating their investments less frequently are...
Prospect theory is widely viewed as the best available descriptive model of how people evaluate risk...
We examine in an experiment the causes, consequences and possible cures of myopic loss aversion (MLA...
We report results from an asset market experiment, in which we investigate the relationship between ...
The paper replicates the study of Benartzi and Thaler (1995), who sug- gest a behavioral explanation...
Standard finance theory portrays investors as rational utility maximisers. Persisting market anomali...