Department of Mathematics,
University of California San Diego
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Stochastic Systems Seminar
Jun Liu
UCSD, Rady School of Management
Long-Lived Private Information in a Continuous Time Economy
Abstract:
Portfolio Choice, Optimal Consumption, and Utility Gain Abstract: We study the consumption-investment problem of an agent with a constant relative risk aversion (CRRA) preference function, who possesses private information about the future prospects of a stock. We examine the value of the information to the agent by comparing the utility equivalent with and without the information of the agent. The value of private information to the agent depends linearly on the wealth of agents and decreases with both the propensity to intermediate consumption and risk aversion. Agents with low coefficients of relative risk aversion value private information more highly. Consistent with the empirical literature, the optimal portfolio holdings of informed agents are correlated with expected returns on the risky asset. Highly risk averse informed agents consume a greater fraction of their wealth when they are informed than when they are uninformed, but the opposite is true of agents with low degrees of risk aversion.
May 31, 2006
4:00 PM
AP&M 7218
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