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Working paper
Robust Portfolio Choice
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Modeling Skewness in Portfolio Choice
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Working paper
Portfolio Choice with Indivisibility
In: The Indian Economic Journal, Band 30, Heft 1, S. 79-86
ISSN: 2631-617X
Portfolio choice and flexibility
In: Journal of Monetary Economics, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 263-279
Robo-advice and portfolio choice
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Household Portfolio Choice and Retirement
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Portfolio Rebalancing and Score-based Portfolio Choice
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Skewness Expectations and Portfolio Choice
In: IZA Discussion Paper No. 15018
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Social Preferences and Portfolio Choice
In: CESifo Working Paper Series No. 4403
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Working paper
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Social preferences and portfolio choice
In: CESifo working paper series 4403
In: Behavioural economics
This paper explores whether social preferences influence portfolio choices of retail investors. We use administrative investor trading records which we link to decisions of the same investors in experiments with real money at stake. We show that social preferences rather than return expectations or risk perceptions are the main driver of investments in socially responsible (SRI) mutual funds. Social preferences are only associated with investments in SRI funds without tax benefits, but are unrelated to investments in SRI funds with tax incentives. This illustrates that tax incentives change the clientele of mutual funds and that tax incentives crowd out the intrinsic motivations of investors with strong social preferences. Our results also show that prosocial behavior in one domain (experiment) is correlated with prosocial behavior in another domain (investments), which adds to the discussion on the usefulness of experiments in finance.
Proximity bias in investors' portfolio choice
This book helps readers understand the widely documented distortion in the portfolio choice of individual investors toward proximate firms - the proximity bias phenomenon. First, it recapitulates the fundamentals of modern portfolio theory. It then goes on to describe and demonstrate different approaches on how to measure proximity bias and identifies and examines potential motives and reasons for such a bias. In addition, the book presents new analysis on the financial effects of individual investors' proximity bias, explaining and contributing with possible policy implications on their portfolio distortion. This book will be of interest to students and researchers, as well as decision-makers in business firms and households.