articleThe Journal of FinanceJan 10, 2008BRONZE OA

Ambiguity, Information Quality, and Asset Pricing

University of Rochester · New York University

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Abstract

ABSTRACT When ambiguity‐averse investors process news of uncertain quality, they act as if they take a worst‐case assessment of quality. As a result, they react more strongly to bad news than to good news. They also dislike assets for which information quality is poor, especially when the underlying fundamentals are volatile. These effects induce ambiguity premia that depend on idiosyncratic risk in fundamentals as well as skewness in returns. Moreover, shocks to information quality can have persistent negative effects on prices even if fundamentals do not change.

Citation impact

865
total citations
FWCI
50.75
Percentile
100%
References
45
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Ambiguity
  • Quality (philosophy)
  • Skewness
  • Ambiguity aversion
  • Capital asset pricing model
  • Economics
  • Information quality
  • Asset (computer security)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
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