Week 6 - Behavioural finance & limits to arbitrage Flashcards
1
Q
Discuss how overconfidence and self-attribution biases can lead to momentum and reversal in the model of Daniel, Hirshleifer, and Subrahmanyam (1998).
[2019, 2016, 5m]
A
- Investors interpret good news as further evidence of their skills and attribute bad news to external errors or sabotage.
- When investors receive confirming news, their confidence in the private signal
rises too much
- when they receive disconfirming news, confidence declines too little. - Suppose, they get good private signal and buy stocks at date.
- If later they receive good news
they buy even more
- if they receive bad news, they do not sell much
- hence, on average, the price
increases. - The reaction to a favorable initial shock (the private information signal) is hump-shaped.
- Price on
average rises further as public information arrives, because confidence about the private signal on average grows => short-lag positive autocorrelation
- more accumulated evidence forces investors
back to a more reasonable expectation => reversal at long horizons. - Similarly for an unfavorable shock.
2
Q
What is performance-based arbitrage?
Explain why arbitrageurs may face capital constraints (such as fund outflows) at times when their investments have the best prospects, e.g., when the mispricing they bet against deepens.
[2019 paper, 4m]
A
- Outside investors do not have full understanding of the manager’s strategies.
- Hence, it may be rational for investors to allocate funds based on past performance of the manager and to withdraw some capital after poor performance (“performance based arbitrage”).
- Responsiveness of funds under management to past performance is called performance based arbitrage.
- This means that the arbitrageurs may face capital constraints precisely when their investments have the best prospects, i.e. when the mispricing they bet against initially deepens.
- Anticipating these potential capital constraints, rational arbitrageurs will be less aggressive in their initial bets against mispricing.
- As a result, arbitrage may not fully enforce market efficiency.
3
Q
Explain how NOISE TRADER RISK creates limits to arbitrage for active portfolio managers.
[2022, 4m]
[2018, 5m]
A
- Doing arbitrage often involves taking short positions.
- However, before the prices of
securities converge, they may diverge even more in the short term due to the activity of noise traders. - As a result, the arbitrageurs may need to liquidate their positions at a loss.
- Therefore, the arbitrageurs have incentives to invest only limited amount of money into arbitrage strategies.