会议专题

Bubbles and Panics in a Frictionless Market with Heterogeneous Expectations

When investors have dierences of opinion about the payos of a stock, Harrison and Kreps (1978) demonstrate the existence of a speculative bubble in the stock price, that is, the stock price can exceed the valuation of the most optimistic investor. A crucial condition that supports this result in their model is that investors are not allowed to short sell the stock. This paper demonstrates that speculative bubbles may arise even without the short sales constraint. The paper also demonstrates that asset panics may arise, that is, the stock price may be lower than the valuations of all individual investors. In particular, even if the short sales constraint binds, asset panics can still arise. This result suggests that Miller’s (1977) insight that the short sales constraint causes the stock price to be above the average valuation is not robust in a dynamic framework. In the case of a bubble, our model generalizes the Harrison-Kreps notion of a resale option, namely, investors believe that they can resell the stock later at a higher price. In the case of a panic, our model develops the notion of a waiting option, namely, investors believe that they can purchase the stock later at a lower price.

H. Henry Cao Hui Ou-Yang

The Kenan-Flagler Business School,University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill,NC 27599-3490 The Fuqua School of Business,Duke University,Durham,NC 27708-0120

国际会议

2005年中国国际金融年会

昆明

英文

2005-07-05(万方平台首次上网日期,不代表论文的发表时间)