Stocks as Lotteries: The Implications of Probability Weighting for Security Prices
NBNicholas BarberisMHMing Huang
Yale University · Cornell University
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Abstract
We study the asset pricing implications of Tversky and Kahneman's (1992) cumulative prospect theory, with a particular focus on its probability weighting component. Our main result, derived from a novel equilibrium with nonunique global optima, is that, in contrast to the prediction of a standard expected utility model, a security's own skewness can be priced: a positively skewed security can be “overpriced” and can earn a negative average excess return. We argue that our analysis offers a unifying way of thinking about a number of seemingly unrelated financial phenomena. (JEL D81, G11, G12)
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1,628
total citations
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- References
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Authors
2- NBNicholas BarberisCorresponding
Yale University
- MHMing Huang
Cornell University
Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Economics
- Prospect theory
- Weighting
- Skewness
- Contrast (vision)
- Capital asset pricing model
- Econometrics
- Cumulative prospect theory
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