Review of Peter Bossaerts, The Paradox of Asset Pricing
Author: LEROY S.
Source: International Journal of the Economics of Business, Volume 10, Number 1, 2003 , pp. 117-126(10)
Abstract:
By 'the paradox of asset pricing' Peter Bossaerts refers to his contention that, despite its apparent generality and sophistication, the theory of finance has largely been a failure empirically. Bossaerts reviews the major areas of finance: theory, empirical methods, empirical results and experiments. The explanatory variables for average asset returns suggested by theory - market beta and consumption beta - predict returns less successfully than variables for which the theoretical basis is weak. This reviewer agrees with Bossaerts' assessment.Bossaerts proposes weakening the hypothesis of market efficiency from full rational expectations to efficient learning: agents update priors optimally - that is, according to Bayes' rule - but start with possibly biased priors. He develops ingenious empirical implications of this specification. For example, he shows that under efficient learning, inverse asset returns are fair games going backward in time (under some additional assumptions). Empirical implementation of these tests appear promising.Keywords: Market Efficiency; Martingales; Experiments; CAPM, Consumption-based Asset Pricing
Document Type: Research article
Affiliations: 1: University of California, 2127 North Hall, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9210, USA; e-mail: sleroy@econ.ucsb.edu
Publication date: 2003-01-01
- Editorial Board
- Information for Authors
- Subscribe to this Title
- ingentaconnect is not responsible for the content or availability of external websites
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Business , Economics
- By this author: LEROY S.

Shopping cart
Receive new issue alert