Essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions

This dissertation is comprised of four essays. It develops statistical models of decision making in the presence of risk with applications to economics and finance. The methodology draws upon economics, finance, psychology, mathematics and statistics. Each essay contributes to the literature by eith...

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Main Author: Charles-Cadogan, Godfrey
Other Authors: Mataramvura, Sure
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20949
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-209492020-07-22T05:07:46Z Essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions Charles-Cadogan, Godfrey Mataramvura, Sure Economics This dissertation is comprised of four essays. It develops statistical models of decision making in the presence of risk with applications to economics and finance. The methodology draws upon economics, finance, psychology, mathematics and statistics. Each essay contributes to the literature by either introducing new theories and empirical predictions or extending old ones with novel approaches .The first essay (Chapter II) includes, to the best of our knowledge, the first known limit distribution of the myopic loss aversion (MLA) index derived from micro-foundations of behavioural economics. That discovery predicts several new results. We prove that the MLA index is in the class of α-stable distributions. This striking prediction is upheld empirically with data from a published meta-study on loss aversion; published data on cross-country loss aversion indexes; and macroeconomic loss aversion index data for US and South Africa. The latter results provide contrast to Hofstede's cross-cultural uncertainty avoidance index for risk perception. We apply the theory to information based asset pricing and show how the MLA index mimics information flows in credit risk models. We embed the MLA index in the pricing kernel of a behavioural consumption based capital asset pricing model (B-CCAPM) and resolve the equity premium puzzle. Our theory predicts: (1) stochastic dominance of good states in the B-CCAPM Markov matrix induce excess volatility; and (2) a countercyclical fourfold pattern of risk attitudes. The second essay (Chapter III) introduces a probability model of "irrational exuberance "and financial market instability implied by index option prices. It is based on a behavioural empirical local Lyapunov exponent (BELLE) process we construct from micro-foundations of behavioural finance. It characterizes stochastic stability of financial markets, with risk attitude factors in fixed point neighbourhoods of the probability weighting functions implied by index option prices. It provides a robust early warning system for market crash across different credit risk sources. We show how the model would have predicted the Great Recession of 2008. The BELLE process characterizes Minskys financial instability hypothesis that financial markets transit from financial relations that make them stable to those that make them unstable. 2016-07-28T12:16:44Z 2016-07-28T12:16:44Z 2016 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20949 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Commerce School of Economics
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Economics
spellingShingle Economics
Charles-Cadogan, Godfrey
Essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions
description This dissertation is comprised of four essays. It develops statistical models of decision making in the presence of risk with applications to economics and finance. The methodology draws upon economics, finance, psychology, mathematics and statistics. Each essay contributes to the literature by either introducing new theories and empirical predictions or extending old ones with novel approaches .The first essay (Chapter II) includes, to the best of our knowledge, the first known limit distribution of the myopic loss aversion (MLA) index derived from micro-foundations of behavioural economics. That discovery predicts several new results. We prove that the MLA index is in the class of α-stable distributions. This striking prediction is upheld empirically with data from a published meta-study on loss aversion; published data on cross-country loss aversion indexes; and macroeconomic loss aversion index data for US and South Africa. The latter results provide contrast to Hofstede's cross-cultural uncertainty avoidance index for risk perception. We apply the theory to information based asset pricing and show how the MLA index mimics information flows in credit risk models. We embed the MLA index in the pricing kernel of a behavioural consumption based capital asset pricing model (B-CCAPM) and resolve the equity premium puzzle. Our theory predicts: (1) stochastic dominance of good states in the B-CCAPM Markov matrix induce excess volatility; and (2) a countercyclical fourfold pattern of risk attitudes. The second essay (Chapter III) introduces a probability model of "irrational exuberance "and financial market instability implied by index option prices. It is based on a behavioural empirical local Lyapunov exponent (BELLE) process we construct from micro-foundations of behavioural finance. It characterizes stochastic stability of financial markets, with risk attitude factors in fixed point neighbourhoods of the probability weighting functions implied by index option prices. It provides a robust early warning system for market crash across different credit risk sources. We show how the model would have predicted the Great Recession of 2008. The BELLE process characterizes Minskys financial instability hypothesis that financial markets transit from financial relations that make them stable to those that make them unstable.
author2 Mataramvura, Sure
author_facet Mataramvura, Sure
Charles-Cadogan, Godfrey
author Charles-Cadogan, Godfrey
author_sort Charles-Cadogan, Godfrey
title Essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions
title_short Essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions
title_full Essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions
title_fullStr Essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions
title_full_unstemmed Essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions
title_sort essays on statistical economics with applications to financial market instability, limit distribution of loss aversion, and harmonic probability weighting functions
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20949
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