How Investors Face Financial Risk: Loss Aversion and Wealth Allocation

Miniatura

Fecha

2010

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Editor

Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. CENTRUM

DOI

Resumen

We studied how the capital allocation decisions and the loss version of nonprofessional investors change subject to behavioral factors. The optimal wealth allocation between risky and risk-free assets results within a value-at-risk (VaR) portfolio model, which involves assessing risk individually according to an extended prospect-theory framework. We showed how the past performance and the portfolio evaluation frequency affect investor behavior and prove myopic loss aversion holds across different evaluation frequencies. We also illustrated that 1 year is the optimal evaluation horizon at which, under practical constraints, maximization of risky holdings occurs. Finally, we presented evidence that indicates that researchers using standard VaR significance levels may be underestimating the loss aversion of individual investors.

Descripción

Palabras clave

Capital Allocation, Myopic Loss Aversion, Portfolio Evaluation, Prospect Theory, Value-at-Risk

Citación

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Licencia Creative Commons

Excepto se indique lo contrario, la licencia de este artículo se describe como info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess