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Research by Mark Loewenstein and Gregory Willard
Poking at the sacred cows of any academic field can be
risky business, but it can also lead to new insights. Mark
Loewenstein and Gregory Willard, assistant professors of
finance, are co-authors of “The Limits of Investor
Behavior,” a paper that presents pointed criticism of a
famous and seminal behavioral finance model. Their
chutzpah—and compelling results—were recognized with a Smith
Breeden Distinguished Paper award from the Journal of
Finance, one of the most significant and prestigious awards
in the finance profession.
The paper sits squarely in the stream of recent research
that questions the foundations of behavioral finance, a
theory of investor behavior that arose in the last 20 years
to describe the seeming disparities between classical
finance theories and actual observation of investor behavior
in the marketplace.
Loewenstein and Willard examined the DSSW model, proposed
by DeLong, Schleifer, Summers, and Waldmann in an early and
extremely influential paper that is famous for arguing that
noise traders have important influence on prices and can
interrupt the mechanism of the Law of One Price through
irrational behavior.
In looking closely at the DSSW model, Loewenstein and
Willard found that some markets don’t clear, and that
non-clearing is what drives most of the model’s results.
“And it’s not just that the markets don’t clear, it is the
potentially violent nature of the non-clearing,” explains
Loewenstein. This non-clearing is the result of a flaw in
the DSSW model, which incorporates an unstated assumption
that allows for unlimited borrowing of extremely large
amounts in a way that is implausible economically.
A second assumption in the DSSW model involves assets
that always pay positive dividends but carry potentially
negative prices. Loewenstein and Willard found that when
prices obey limited liability and investors’ borrowing
satisfies plausible limits, prices collapse to the right
value and the Law of One Price is restored.
Loewenstein and Willard argue that certain economic
principles, such as market clearing, collateralized
borrowing, and limited liability, limit the properties of
asset prices independent of investor behavior. They
demonstrate this in a model that uses only budget equations
and market clearing and requires virtually no assumptions
about investor behavior.
Loewenstein and Willard’s paper brings to light a few of
the serious flaws in the DSSW model, and thus the
foundations of behavioral finance. “People are starting to
take more seriously what is going on in these models,” says
Loewenstein. “The DSSW model looks reasonable at first
glance, but if you look at it more closely, it makes
economically unreasonable assumptions.”
“The Limits of Investor Behavior” was published in the
Journal of Finance. For more information about this
research, contact mloewens@rhsmith.umd.edu or
gwillard@rhsmith.umd.edu.
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