Ambiguity and information processing in a model of intermediary asset pricing

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First author draft
Date
2019-05-12
Authors
Han, Leyla Jianyu
Kasa, Kenneth
Luo, Yulei
Version
First author draft
OA Version
Citation
L.J. Han, K. Kasa, Y. Luo. "Ambiguity and Information Processing in a Model of Intermediary Asset Pricing." SSRN Electronic Journal, https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3386888
Abstract
This paper incorporates ambiguity and information processing constraints into a model of intermediary asset pricing. Financial intermediaries are assumed to possess greater information processing capacity. Households purchase this capacity, and then delegate their investment decisions to intermediaries. As in He and Krishnamurthy (2012), the delegation contract is constrained by a moral hazard problem, which gives rise to a minimum capital requirement. Both households and intermediaries have a preference for robustness, reflecting ambiguity about asset returns (Hansen and Sargent (2008)). We show that ambiguity aversion tightens the capital constraint, and amplifies its effects. Detection error probabilities are used to discipline the degree of ambiguity aversion. The model can explain both the unconditional moments of asset returns and their state dependence, even with DEPs in excess of 20%.
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