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Journal ArticleDOI

The Efficiency Analysis of Choices Involving Risk

Giora Hanoch, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1969 - 
- Vol. 36, Iss: 3, pp 335-346
TLDR
In this paper, an analysis of the first step of the decision-making process of an individual decision maker among alternative risky ventures is presented, in terms of a single dimension such as money, both for the utility functions and for the probability distributions.
Abstract
Publisher Summary The choice of an individual decision maker among alternative risky ventures may be regarded as a two-step procedure. The decision maker chooses an efficient set among all available portfolios, independently of his tastes or preferences. Then, the decision maker applies individual preferences to this set to choose the desired portfolio. The subject of this chapter is the analysis of the first step. It deals with optimal selection rules that minimize the efficient set by discarding any portfolio that is inefficient in the sense that it is inferior to a member of the efficient set, from point of view of each and every individual, when all individuals' utility functions are assumed to be of a given general class of admissible functions. The analysis presented in the chapter is carried out in terms of a single dimension such as money, both for the utility functions and for the probability distributions. However, the results may easily be extended, with minor changes in the theorems and the proofs, to the multivariate case. The chapter explains a necessary and sufficient condition for efficiency, when no further restrictions are imposed on the utility functions. It presents proofs of the optimal efficiency criterion in the presence of general risk aversion, that is, for concave utility functions.

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Citations
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Adam Smith on lotteries: an interpretation and formal restatement

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A theory of misperception in a stochastic dominance framework and its application to structured financial products

TL;DR: In this article, the authors study the mechanism of misperception that leads retail investors to investment choices which are not the most profitable, in a stochastic dominance framework from a theoretical perspective and supported by an extensive numerical analysis.
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A parametric approach to stochastic dominance: the lognormal case

TL;DR: In this article, a method for applying the SDR criteria to continuous distributions where, in general, a small number of comparisons is involved is suggested, and for some distributions e.g., lognormal the relationship is stated in terms of the distributions' parameters, and hence only one comparison is required.
Journal ArticleDOI

What is the Economic Cost of the Investment Home Bias

TL;DR: In this article, the authors define economic home bias (EHB) to distinguish it from investment home bias, where the IHB measures investment weights and the EHB measures economic cost, and find that for reasonable degrees of risk aversion and with 25 years multivariate distribution, that the annual EHB loss is merely 0.1%, despite the large domestic overinvestment of about 40% in the US.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Capital asset prices: a theory of market equilibrium under conditions of risk*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a body of positive microeconomic theory dealing with conditions of risk, which can be used to predict the behavior of capital marcets under certain conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Utility Analysis of Choices Involving Risk

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors suggest that an important class of reactions of individuals to risk can be rationalized by a rather simple extension of orthodox utility analysis, i.e., individuals frequently must, or can, choose among alternatives that differ, among other things, in the degree of risk to which the individual will be subject.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Existence of Probability Measures with Given Marginals

TL;DR: In this article, the existence of probability distributions with given marginals is studied under typically weaker assumptions, than those which are required by the use of Theorem 1, and necessary and sufficient conditions for a sequence of probability measures to be the sequence of distributions of a martingale, an upper semi-martingale or of partial sums of independent random variables.