Problems of Expectations Example: Market Bubbles
http://cowles.econ.yale.edu/P/cd/d13a/d1303.pdf
Author: Shiller, Robert J.
Source: Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics
Cowles Foundation Discussion Paper NO. 1303
Yale University
Year: 2001
Abstract:
Research in psychology and behavioral finance is surveyed for evidence to what extent experts such as professional investment managers or endowment trustees may behave in such a way as to help perpetuate speculative bubbles in financial markets. This paper discusses scholarly psychological literature on the representativeness heuristic, overconfidence, attentional anomalies, self-esteem, conformity pressures, salience and justification for insights into weaknesses in expert opinion. The role of the prudent person standard and the news media in influencing experts is considered. The relevance of the literature on testing of the efficient markets theory is discussed.