Université de Lausanne
Ecole des HEC
Département d'économétrie
et d'économie politique
Jeudi 27 septembre 2007, 12h15
Internef, Dorigny, salle 231
Rui CASTRO
(Dept. of Economics and CIREQ, Université de Montréal, Canada)
Asset Pricing in a Production Economy with Chew-Dekel Preferences
(paper written with Claudio Campanale and Gian Luca Clementi)
Abstract
In this paper we provide a thorough characterization of the asset
returns implied by a simple general equilibrium production economy with convex
investment adjustment costs. When households have Epstein-Zin preferences, there
exist plausible parameter values such that the model generates unconditional
mean risk-free rate and equity return, and volatility of consumption growth,
which are in line with historical averages for the US economy. Consistently
with the data, the price-dividend ratio is pro-cyclical and stock returns are
predictable (and increasingly so as the time horizon increases), while dividend
growth is not. The model also implies realistic values for (i) the correlation
of the risk-free rate with output growth and consumption growth and (ii) the
correlation pattern between risk-free rate, equity return, and equity premium.
The risk implied by the model is rather low. Given the work of Rabin (2000)
among others, it is not surprising that our Epstein-Zin agent exhibits a much
higher risk aversion when faced with substantially larger risks. This shortcoming,
however, does not extend to the case in which agents are disappointment averse
in the sense of Gul (1991). When faced with a lottery that has a coefficient
of variation 100 times as large as that implied by our model, a disappointment
averse agent displays the same relative risk aversion as an expected utility
agent with logarithmic utility!
Site web du séminaire (avec texte en ligne): http://www.hec.unil.ch/deep/evenements-english/e-sem-all-2007-08.htm