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This paper attempts to establish the existence of equilibrium, in an asset market inhabited by two representative investors with different risk aversions. In order to capture heterogeneity in information and wealth, the paper segments the investor
population into two: (i) Individual investors and (ii) Institutional investors. Based on
prior literature, the present study posits that Institutional investors demonstrate
rational intentional herding and positive feedback trading (buy when the markets rise
and sell when it falls) and individual investors demonstrate negative feedback trading
(vice versa). In other words, when the markets are (monotonically) increasing,
institutional investors, expecting the trend to continue would buy more, thus
demonstrating decreasing absolute risk aversion. Similarly, when the market is
(monotonically) decreasing he will try to stem his loss as soon as possible,
demonstrating increasing absolute risk aversion. Such an investment behavior is
captured in a power utility function. Further, negative feedback trading by individual
investors implies that when market is (monotonically) increasing individual investors,
expecting the trend to reverse, would sell. Thus demonstrating increasing absolute
risk aversion. And when the markets are (monotonically) decreasing, they would hold
on to their investments expecting better times to come, thus depicting decreasing
absolute risk aversion. Such investment behavior is captured by a quadratic utility
function. Given their wealth and investment behavior, the two investor groups would
trade with each other such that the market clears. To the best of our knowledge this is
the first paper that proposes a asset pricing model that not only allows for behavioural biases but also for heterogeneous agents who are affected differently by these biases. This paper establishes the bounds for the absolute risk aversion function and the shadow rate of interest at which the two investor groups will lend money to each other to enable trading and market clearing. For reasonable endowments and presumed behavioural biases as implied by the chosen utility function, a numerical example at the end of this paper shows that the market clearing interest rate (at which the investors would lend to and borrow from each other) occurs between 15.5% and 28.05%. |
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