Individual Decision Making and Investor Welfare
This article analyses and quantifies the costs of suboptimal decision making for an investor with a multi‐period horizon. In light of the empirical evidence that investors are too conservative and hold portfolios that are insufficiently diversified, we evaluate the costs of suboptimal equity partici...
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Published in: | Economic notes - Monte Paschi Siena Vol. 28; no. 2; pp. 119 - 143 |
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Main Authors: | , |
Format: | Journal Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Oxford, UK and Boston, USA
Blackwell Publishers Ltd
01-07-1999
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Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | This article analyses and quantifies the costs of suboptimal decision making for an investor with a multi‐period horizon. In light of the empirical evidence that investors are too conservative and hold portfolios that are insufficiently diversified, we evaluate the costs of suboptimal equity participation both analytically and using simulation, and also estimate the costs of suboptimal diversification using simulation. We find that suboptimal leverage imposes only modest costs on the investor for reasonable parameter values. While the costs of inadequate diversification can be very high, we find that, because of the higher returns on small firms, an equally weighted portfolio of as few as five randomly chosen firms can provide the same level of expected utility as the value weighted market portfolio.
(J.E.L.: G11, G18, G23). |
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Bibliography: | ArticleID:ECNO007 istex:8D9BCB04CD93AF5F9521AC9A1537E66F4783E447 ark:/67375/WNG-BW3V33F5-W |
ISSN: | 0391-5026 1468-0300 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1468-0300.00007 |