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portada Finance and Economics Discussion Series: Expectations of Risk and Return Among Household Investors: Are Their Sharpe Ratios Countercyclical (in English)
Type
Physical Book
Publisher
Language
Inglés
Pages
48
Format
Paperback
Dimensions
24.6 x 18.9 x 0.3 cm
Weight
0.10 kg.
ISBN13
9781288707669

Finance and Economics Discussion Series: Expectations of Risk and Return Among Household Investors: Are Their Sharpe Ratios Countercyclical (in English)

United States Federal Reserve Board (Author) · Gene Amromin (Author) · Steven A. Sharpe (Author) · Bibliogov · Paperback

Finance and Economics Discussion Series: Expectations of Risk and Return Among Household Investors: Are Their Sharpe Ratios Countercyclical (in English) - United States Federal Reserve Board ; Amromin, Gene ; Sharpe, Steven A.

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Synopsis "Finance and Economics Discussion Series: Expectations of Risk and Return Among Household Investors: Are Their Sharpe Ratios Countercyclical (in English)"

Data obtained from special questions on the Michigan Survey of Consumer Attitudes over several years are used to analyze stock market beliefs and portfolio choices of household investors. Consistent with other survey results, expected future returns appear to be extrapolated from past realized returns. The data also indicate that expected risk and return are strongly influenced by economic prospects. When investors believe macroeconomic conditions are more expansionary, they tend to expect both higher returns and lower volatility, which implies that household Sharpe ratios are procyclical. Separately, perceived risk in equity returns is found to be strongly influenced by household investor characteristics, consistent with documented behavioral biases. These expectations reported by respondents are given credence by the finding that the proportion of equity holdings in respondent portfolios tends to be higher for those who report higher expected returns and lower uncertainty. Finally, the finding of procyclical expected returns holds up when we instead condition on conventional business cycle proxies such as the dividend yield and CAY, which yields a stark contrast with the inferences from studies based on actual returns.

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