scholarly journals TIME DIVERSIFICATION: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE ECONOMIC INDEX OF RISKINESS

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (03) ◽  
pp. 1850011 ◽  
Author(s):  
RICHARD LU ◽  
CHEN-CHEN YANG ◽  
WING-KEUNG WONG

Time diversification which is the idea of there being less riskiness over longer investment horizons is examined in this paper. Different from previous studies, this paper contributes to the literature by using the Aumann and Serrano index as a risk measure to examine whether there is any time diversification in stock investment by using the daily returns of S&P 500, S&P 400, and NASDAQ with both short and long holding periods and by using the block bootstrapping technique in the simulation. The advantage of using the Aumann and Serrano index as a risk measure is that it satisfies the monotonicity with respect to stochastic dominance while most of other risk measures do not. From the returns of short (long) holding periods, we conclude that, in general, the riskiness of the shorter (longer) period is statistically greater than that of the longer (shorter) period. Our findings reject the hypothesis of no time diversification effect and reject the geometric Brownie motion process for the returns of different holding periods. The results could be due to short- and medium-term momentums and long-term contrarian. Our findings are useful to academics, investors, and policy makers in their decision-making related to time diversification.

Mathematics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 111
Author(s):  
Hyungbin Park

This paper proposes modified mean-variance risk measures for long-term investment portfolios. Two types of portfolios are considered: constant proportion portfolios and increasing amount portfolios. They are widely used in finance for investing assets and developing derivative securities. We compare the long-term behavior of a conventional mean-variance risk measure and a modified one of the two types of portfolios, and we discuss the benefits of the modified measure. Subsequently, an optimal long-term investment strategy is derived. We show that the modified risk measure reflects the investor’s risk aversion on the optimal long-term investment strategy; however, the conventional one does not. Several factor models are discussed as concrete examples: the Black–Scholes model, Kim–Omberg model, Heston model, and 3/2 stochastic volatility model.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Γεώργιος Παπαγιάννης

The main aim of the present thesis is to investigate the effect of diverging priors concerning model uncertainty on decision making. One of the main issues in the thesis is to assess the effect of different notions of distance in the space of probability measures and their use as loss functionals in the process of identifying the best suited model among a set of plausible priors. Another issue, is that of addressing the problem of ``inhomogeneous" sets of priors, i.e. sets of priors that highly divergent opinions may occur, and the need to robustly treat that case. As high degrees of inhomogeneity may lead to distrust of the decision maker to the priors it may be desirable to adopt a particular prior corresponding to the set which somehow minimizes the ``variability" among the models on the set. This leads to the notion of Frechet risk measure. Finally, an important problem is the actual calculation of robust risk measures. An account of their variational definition, the problem of calculation leads to the numerical treatment of problems of the calculus of variations for which reliable and effective algorithms are proposed. The contributions of the thesis are presented in the following three chapters. In Chapter 2, a statistical learning scheme is introduced for constructing the best model compatible with a set of priors provided by different information sources of varying reliability. As various priors may model well different aspects of the phenomenon the proposed scheme is a variational scheme based on the minimization of a weighted loss function in the space of probability measures which in certain cases is shown to be equivalent to weighted quantile averaging schemes. Therefore in contrast to approaches such as minimax decision theory in which a particular element of the prior set is chosen we construct for each prior set a probability measure which is not necessarily an element of it, a fact that as shown may lead to better description of the phenomenon in question. While treating this problem we also address the issue of the effect of the choice of distance functional in the space of measures on the problem of model selection. One of the key findings in this respect is that the class of Wasserstein distances seems to have the best performance as compared to other distances such as the KL-divergence. In Chapter 3, motivated by the results of Chapter 2, we treat the problem of specifying the risk measure for a particular loss when a set of highly divergent priors concerning the distribution of the loss is available. Starting from the principle that the ``variability" of opinions is not welcome, a fact for which a strong axiomatic framework is provided (see e.g. Klibanoff (2005) and references therein) we introduce the concept of Frechet risk measures, which corresponds to a minimal variance risk measure. Here we view a set of priors as a discrete measure on the space of probability measures and by variance we mean the variance of this discrete probability measure. This requires the use of the concept of Frechet mean. By different metrizations of the space of probability measures we define a variety of Frechet risk measures, the Wasserstein, the Hellinger and the weighted entropic risk measure, and illustrate their use and performance via an example related to the static hedging of derivatives under model uncertainty. In Chapter 4, we consider the problem of numerical calculation of convex risk measures applying techniques from the calculus of variations. Regularization schemes are proposed and the theoretical convergence of the algorithms is considered.


Author(s):  
Rishika Rishika ◽  
Sven Feurer ◽  
Kelly L Haws

Abstract Licensing is a well-documented form of justifying individual indulgent choices, but less is known about how licensing affects food decision-making patterns over time. Accordingly, we examine whether consumers incorporate licensing strategically and deliberately in their long-term consumption patterns and identify reward programs as a context in which strategic licensing is likely to occur. We propose that members with lower-calorie consumption patterns strategically indulge more on reward purchase occasions, and that forethought is required for such an effect to occur. A longitudinal study analyzing 272,677 real food purchases made by 7,828 consumers over a 14-month period provides striking evidence of our key proposition. An exploration of the inter-purchase time-related aspect of purchase acceleration suggests that forethought on behalf of consumers is necessary for strategic licensing to occur. A subsequent experimental study (N = 605) comprising five consecutive choice occasions provides additional evidence of forethought by demonstrating that strategic licensing occurs only when expected (but not windfall reward) occasions are involved, and by showing that anticipated negative affect for not indulging is the driving mechanism. We conclude with a discussion of the implications of our results for consumers, managers, and public policy makers.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (34) ◽  
pp. 20363-20371
Author(s):  
Nils Chr. Stenseth ◽  
Mark R. Payne ◽  
Erik Bonsdorff ◽  
Dorothy J. Dankel ◽  
Joël M. Durant ◽  
...  

The ocean is a lifeline for human existence, but current practices risk severely undermining ocean sustainability. Present and future social−ecological challenges necessitate the maintenance and development of knowledge and action by stimulating collaboration among scientists and between science, policy, and practice. Here we explore not only how such collaborations have developed in the Nordic countries and adjacent seas but also how knowledge from these regions contributes to an understanding of how to obtain a sustainable ocean. Our collective experience may be summarized in three points: 1) In the absence of long-term observations, decision-making is subject to high risk arising from natural variability; 2) in the absence of established scientific organizations, advice to stakeholders often relies on a few advisors, making them prone to biased perceptions; and 3) in the absence of trust between policy makers and the science community, attuning to a changing ocean will be subject to arbitrary decision-making with unforeseen and negative ramifications. Underpinning these observations, we show that collaboration across scientific disciplines and stakeholders and between nations is a necessary condition for appropriate actions.


Author(s):  
Alphonse Hounsounou ◽  
Prof. Dr. Hito Braga de Moraes ◽  
Prof. Dr. Maamar El Robrini

The Autonomous Port of Cotonou (PAC) located in West Africa has an access channel 15m deep, 11 berths, and an internal draft of 15m (maximum), and is connected with a road to serve continental countries such as Burkina-Faso, Chad , Mali, Niger and Nigeria. The PAC presents low productivity (average of 10,000,000 tons / year, 24.40% of the movement from the port of Lagos / Nigeria) in West Africa. This article aims to evaluate the application of fuzzy logic in the Autonomous Port of Cotonou (Benin) in the analysis of logistic viability. The methodology followed the fuzzy logic that is a support method for logistic decision-making, based on fuzzy rules (SBRF). It was used characteristic of Mamdani Matlab Toolbox with three membership functions (triangular, trapezoidal and Gaussian) to model the quality variables of infrastructures and services, equipment productivity, seeking a long-term way out of logistic viability. The result of logistic viability was medium term, equivalent to 13 years / 25 years; as far as the outcome of the future PAC is concerned. The logistic viability of the PAC depends on its input variables. The projection of this application was long term, at least 19 years / 25 years when the infrastructures are of good quality and the equipment is more modern and consistent with the current realities to satisfy the expectations of the customers.  


Author(s):  
Francisco Grimaldo ◽  
Francisco Ródenas ◽  
Miguel Lozano ◽  
Stephanie Carretero ◽  
Juan Manuel Orduña ◽  
...  

The governance requires technical support regarding the complexity in deciding health policies to assist people who require long-term care. Long-term care policies require the use of ICT simulation tools that can provide policy makers with the option of going into a decision theatre and virtually knowing the consequences of different policies prior to finally determining the real policy to be adopted. In this sense, there is an absence of simulation tools for decision making about long-term care policies. In this chapter, the authors propose the foundations and guidelines of SSIMSOWELL, a new scalable, multiagent simulation tool that increases the prediction capacity of governance in the long term care policies, improving the decision making in short, medium, and large term in different European regions. The simulation tool implements a previously validated Social Sustainability Model (SSM). The main goal of SSIMSOWELL is the prediction of policy impacts and the development of new governance models, since it increases the budgetary efficiency and the sustainability of long term policies. In addition, it improves the capacity of policy makers in modelling, planning, and evaluating social-health policies at different scales, ranges, and times in the European Union.


1984 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 581-595 ◽  
Author(s):  
Colin Thain

This article concentrates on explanations of Britain's economic decline which highlight the role of the Treasury. There is inconclusive evidence that stop-go financial policies and low investment have contributed to low growth. It is argued that foreign economic policy delayed the modernization of the economy. Although officials influence day-to-day strategy and the creation of instrumentation, the collegiate nature of decision-making means that civil service influence is hard to assess. The Treasury is constrained by pressure groups and by other departments in Whitehall. These constraints are examined with reference to the Medium-Term Financial Strategy. Finally, there are long-term reasons for Britain's decline and these do not originate in any one institution. It is not possible to analyse the role of the Treasury in isolation.


Author(s):  
Gilang Ramdhan

The flood problem is the long-time housework which is continuously done by the DKI Jakarta Government, to overcome the problem of the flood as the output from the policy of DKI Jakarta Government is the implementation of the flood prevention policy, both short-term, medium-term and long-term programs. In the implementation of the policy there are factors that can hamper and support the success of policy implementation there are communication, resources, bureaucratic or implementing attitude, and organizational structure including bureaucratic workflow. In terms of communication the real obstacle is the government are still difficult to establish communication with intermediary parties as one of the stakeholders. In terms of bureaucratic attitudes emphasized the independence of the apparatus to policy makers who have an important role in the success of policy implementation. In the government organization of DKI Jakarta itself has been applied innovation with the yellow, blue, and orange “soldiers” that can support the success of policy implementation. But unfortunately from DKI government's own policy environment does not yet have the full support of Jakarta DPRD so it can hamper the policies to be published by the executive. The conclusion of this paper is the government of DKI has a scope of problems that must be well compromised and which is still a wedge is the communication aspect, both internal and external so that the implementation of flood prevention policy in Jakarta can run well.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 2766-2776
Author(s):  
Nidhi Jain ◽  
Bikrant Kesari

Objective: The key objective of the paper is to study the magnitude of the disparity in actions between stock holders for short-term and long-term. Methods: Investor traits and how the judgement on investments and behavioral bias are interconnected are contrasted by using a systemic model, as well as to compare relative behavioral bias variations including Framing Bias, Endowment Bias, Representative Bias, Cognitive Dissonance Bias, Self-Control Bias and Overconfidence Bias. Distinguishing evidence of behavioral characteristics that are normally related to investment venture helps to provide assessments and confine trading techniques. Results: Between July 2020 and August 2020, the cognitive effect of investor decision-making is contrasted via test review of 300 substantive responders from deliberate Indian stock market investors. Taking into account the structural equation modelling (SEM), a route study is carried out of the manner in which stock investment and proposed behavioral inclinations are concomitant. Conclusions: Observational outcomes suggest that the systemic path model deliberately correlates with the survey content, demonstrating the influence of behavioral discrimination in decision-making for individual investments. Our results also indicate that short-term and long-term investors’ behavioral patterns vary substantially.


2012 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 285-299 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Niggol Seo

Abstract This paper examines decision making under climate risks using farmers’ decisions in sub-Saharan Africa, where climate risks are very high. Two risk measures are obtained from the Climate Research Unit’s high-resolution climatology, diurnal temperature range (DTR) and coefficient of variation in precipitation (CVP), which are both averages of 30-yr climate data. Farm surveys of around 7600 households were matched cell by cell with the climate risk data. This paper finds that climate risks are indeed highest in the lowland arid zones in the Sahel. A spatial logit analysis shows that farmers in sub-Saharan Africa have adapted their agricultural systems to varying degrees of the CVP and the DTR. In the long term, if the CVP were to increase by 30%, an integrated system would increase by 7.0%. On the other hand, the two specialized systems fall: a crops-only system falls by 5.3% and a livestock-only system falls by 1.7%. When the DTR increases, farmers adapt by switching to a specialized livestock system. Under increased climate risks, this paper finds that farmers in the lowland savannahs and arid zones in the Sahel, where climate risks are high at present, will adapt by switching to an integrated system. Studies of climate risks, therefore, must account for behavioral responses of the individuals. These results can be utilized to help African farmers to adapt to increasing climate risks.


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