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Abstract
We review extensive evidence about how psychological biases affect investor behavior and prices. Systematic mispricing probably causes substantial resource misallocation. We argue that limited attention and overconfidence cause investor credulity about the strategic incentives of informed market participants. However, individuals as political participants remain subject to the biases and self-interest they exhibit in private settings. Indeed, correcting contemporaneous market pricing errors is probably not government's relative advantage. Government and private planners should establish rules ex ante to improve choices and efficiency, including disclosure, reporting, advertising, and default-option-setting regulations. Especially, government should avoid actions that exacerbate investor biases.
Volume
49
Page
139-209
Number
1
Year
2002
Keywords
Investor psychology; Capital markets; Policy; Accounting regulation; Disclosure; Behavioral finance; Behavioral economics; Market efficiency
Categories
Behavioral Insurance
CAPM/Asset Pricing
Publications
Journal of Monetary Economics