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Are long-horizon expectations (de-)stabilizing? Theory and experiments

Authors :
George W. Evans
Cars Hommes
Bruce McGough
Isabelle Salle
Behavioural Economics
Faculteit Economie en Bedrijfskunde
Equilibrium, Expectations & Dynamics / CeNDEF (ASE, FEB)
Macro & International Economics (ASE, FEB)
Source :
Journal of Monetary Economics, 132, 44-63. Elsevier
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The impact of finite forecasting horizons on price dynamics is examined in a standard infinite-horizon asset-pricing model. Our theoretical results link forecasting horizon inversely to expectational feedback, and predict a positive relationship between expectational feedback and various measures of asset-price volatility. We design a laboratory experiment to test these predictions. Consistent with our theory, short-horizon markets are prone to substantial and prolonged deviations from rational expectations, whereas markets with even a modest share of long-horizon forecasters exhibit convergence. Longer-horizon forecasts display more heterogeneity but also prevent coordination on incorrect anchors – a pattern that leads to mispricing in short-horizon markets.

Subjects

Subjects :
Economics and Econometrics
Finance

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03043932
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Monetary Economics, 132, 44-63. Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....632f1f65d8335e0b12ecb0da812e4cd2