Rational agents can upset asset-pricing paradigm

In contrast to the standard paradigm about momentum and reversal in markets being caused by agents reacting wrongly, new research shows that these phenomena can arise in markets with rational agents.

Dr Paul Woolley and Dr Dimitri Vayanos, are proposing a rational theory of momentum and reversal based on delegated portfolio management.

In research done for the Paul Woolley Centre for the Study of Capital Market Dysfunctionality, Woolley and Vayanos turn the standard asset-pricing paradigm on its head.

“Momentum and reversal are viewed as anomalies because they are hard to explain within the standard asset-pricing paradigm with rational agents and frictionless markets,” they say. Widespread explanations of these occurrences are behavioural, and assume that agents react incorrectly to information signals.

Woolley and Vayanos’ research shows that momentum and reversal “can arise in markets with rational agents”, and they abandon the standard paradigm by assuming that investors delegate the management of their portfolios to financial institutions, such as mutual funds and hedge funds.

Writing on “An Institutional Theory of Momentum and Reversal”, Woolley and Vayanos propose a rational theory say flows between investment funds are triggered by changes in fund managers’ efficiency, which investors see directly or infer from past performance.

Sponsored Content

“Momentum arises if fund flows exhibit inertia, and because rational prices do not fully adjust to reflect future flows,” they say. “Reversal arises because flows push prices away from fundamental values.”

Besides momentum and reversal, fund flows generate co-movement, lead-lag effects and amplification, with all effects being larger for assets with high idiosyncratic risk, while managers’ concern with commercial risk can make prices more volatile.

Ironically, managers’ efforts to protect themselves against commercial risk can have the perverse effect of making prices more volatile, and increase co-movement.

Woolley and Vayanos address the asset-pricing effect of commercial-risk management, that is of actions that managers can take to protect themselves against the risk of experiencing outflows.

“A manager concerned with commercial risk is reluctant to deviate from the market index,” they say. “The intuition in the case of asymmetric information is that a deviation subjects the manager to the risk of underperforming, relative to the market index and experiencing outflows.”

Commercial-risk concerns thus lower the prices of stocks that the active fund overweights, and raise those of underweighted stocks.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

US asset managers trail European counterparts in ESG

Less than a quarter of US asset managers are using ESG risk analysis to inform their investment decisions, and European managers are considerably out-performing their American and global counterparts in integrating sustainability considerations, a report from MSCI ESG Research has revealed.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

CalPERS’ real estate target to oscillate to 10 per cent

CalPERS will change its interim asset allocation targets to accommodate the smooth transition of the real estate portfolio to its long term 10 per cent allocation. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Future Fund lags behind long-term objectives

Australia’s $77.63 billion Future Fund is lagging behind its long-term investment objectives, achieving a nominal annual return of 5.2 per cent over the past five years.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Towers Watson thinks ahead to map creative investment

Market volatility is not something the Thinking Ahead Group at Towers Watson concerns itself with, it is more worried with understanding the interconnectedness of the world and how that can help create ‘useful investment maps’. With this in mind, head of the group Tim Hodgson, says it recently recalibrated its list of 15 “extreme risks”.mrec4inarticleinline

Young ESG veteran sees move to mainstream

Partner and global head of Mercer’s responsible investment business, Jane Ambachtsheer, has received a lifetime achievement award for her commitment to socially responsible investment in Canada. She spoke to Amanda White about what it’s like to be a life-time achiever at the age of 36, and what still needs to be done in integrating ESG

Thinking about Innovation as the new asset bucket

I had a moment this week where I was utterly absorbed by how indulgent my job can be. I interviewed Tim Hodgson, head of the Thinking Ahead Group at Towers Watson. He gets paid to think, and I was getting paid to talk to him about thinking. Anyway, it’s had a knock-on effect and ever

Previous