Abstract
This paper presents a stylized model of interaction among boundedly rational heterogeneous agents in a multi-asset financial market to examine how agents’ impatience, extrapolation, and switching behaviors can affect cross-section market stability. Besides extrapolation and performance based switching between fundamental and extrapolative trading documented in single asset market, we show that a high degree of ‘impatience’ of agents who are ready to switch to more profitable trading strategy in the short run provides a further cross-section destabilizing mechanism. Though the ‘fundamental’ steady-state values, which reflect the standard present-value of the dividends, represent an unbiased equilibrium market outcome in the long run (to a certain extent), the price deviation from the fundamental price in one asset can spill-over to other assets, resulting in cross-section instability. Based on a (Neimark–Sacker) bifurcation analysis, we provide explicit conditions on how agents’ impatience, extrapolation, and switching can destabilize the market and result in a variety of short and long-run patterns for the cross-section asset price dynamics.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 727-754 |
| Number of pages | 28 |
| Journal | Decisions in Economics and Finance |
| Volume | 44 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Dec 2021 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Asset pricing
- Bifurcation analysis
- Heterogeneous beliefs
- Portfolio choice
- Strategy switching