Title: | Does the Failure of the Expectations Hypothesis Matter for Long-Term Investors |
Authors: | Sangvinatsos, Antonios Wachter, Jessica |
Issue Date: | 8-Dec-2003 |
Series/Report no.: | S-CDM-03-13 |
Abstract: | We consider the consumption and portfolio choice problem of a long-run investor when the term structure is affine and when the investor has access to nominal bonds and a stock portfolio. In the presence of unhedgeable inflation risk, there exist multiple pricing kernels that produce the same bond prices, but a unique pricing kernel equal to the marginal utility of the investor. We apply our method to a three-factor Gaussian model with a time-varying price of risk that captures the failure of the expectations hypothesis seen in the data. We extend this model to account for time-varying expected inflation, and estimate the model with both inflation and term structure data. The estimates imply that the bond portfolio for the long-run investor looks very different from the portfolio of a mean-variance optimizer. In particular, the desire to hedge changes in term premia generates large hedging demands for long-term bonds. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2451/26747 |
Appears in Collections: | Credit & Debt Markets |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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S-CDM-03-13.pdf | 511.65 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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