scholarly journals An expected utility maximizer walks into a bar...

2013 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 215-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel R. Burghart ◽  
Paul W. Glimcher ◽  
Stephanie C. Lazzaro
2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (03) ◽  
pp. 1850013 ◽  
Author(s):  
CAROLE BERNARD ◽  
STEVEN VANDUFFEL ◽  
JIANG YE

We derive the optimal portfolio for an expected utility maximizer whose utility does not only depend on terminal wealth but also on some random benchmark (state-dependent utility). We then apply this result to obtain the optimal portfolio of a loss-averse investor with a random reference point (extending a result of Berkelaar et al. (2004) Optimal portfolio choice under loss aversion, The Review of Economics and Statistics 86 (4), 973–987). Clearly, the optimal portfolio has some joint distribution with the benchmark and we show that it is the cheapest possible in having this distribution. This characterization result allows us to infer the state-dependent utility function that explains the demand for a given (joint) distribution.


2006 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ettore Damiano

This paper considers the problem of an agent's choice under uncertainty in a new framework. The agent does not know the true probability distribution over the state space but is objectively informed that it belongs to a specified set of probabilities. Maintaining the hypothesis that this agent is a subjective expected utility maximizer, we address the question of how the objective information influences her subjective prior.Three plausible rules are proposed. The first, named state independence, states that the subjective probability should not depend on how the uncertain states are `labeled'. Location-consistency, the second property, assumes that `similar' objective sets of probabilities result in `similar' subjective priors. The third rule is an `update-consistency' rule. Suppose the agent selects some probability p. She is then told that the likelihood assigned by p to some event A is in fact correct; then this should not cause her to revise her choice of p.Another property, alternative to update-consistency, is also proposed. When an agent forms her subjective prior assigning subjective probabilities to events in some ordered sequence, this property requires that the resulting prior be independent of that order. This last property, named order independence, is shown to be equivalent to update-consistency.A class of sets of probabilities is found on which state independence, location-consistency and update consistency (order independence) uniquely determine a selection rule. Some intuition is given regarding why these properties work in this collection of problems.


2018 ◽  
Vol 05 (03) ◽  
pp. 1850024
Author(s):  
N. Azevedo ◽  
D. Pinheiro ◽  
S. Z. Xanthopoulos ◽  
A. N. Yannacopoulos

Within the setup of continuous-time semimartingale financial markets, we show that a multiprior Gilboa–Schmeidler minimax expected utility maximizer forms a portfolio consisting only of the riskless asset if and only if among the investor’s priors there exists a probability measure under which all admissible wealth processes are supermartingales. Furthermore, we show that under a certain attainability condition (which is always valid in finite or complete markets) this is also equivalent to the existence of an equivalent (local) martingale measure among the investor’s priors. As an example, we generalize a no betting result due to Dow and Werlang.


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