Predictors and Portfolios Over the Life Cycle
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Date
2018-06-08
Author
Kraft, Holger
Munk, Claus
Weiss, Farina
SAFE No.
139
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Abstract
In a calibrated consumption-portfolio model with stock, housing, and labor income predictability, we evaluate the welfare effects of predictability on life-cycle consumption-portfolio choice. We compare skilled investors who are able to take advantage of all sources of predictability with unskilled investors ignoring predictability. For an unskilled investor the certainty equivalent of wealth is 0.3-6.8% lower than for a skilled investor, depending on the market entry date. We also determine the effect of luck to enter the market at a favorable time. Across market entry dates, skilled but unlucky investors can lose up to 15.4% compared to unskilled but lucky investors.
Research Area
Household Finance
Keywords
return predictability, scenarios, welfare, performance, housing
JEL Classification
G11, D91, D14
Research Data
Topic
Saving and Borrowing
Consumption
Monetary Policy
Consumption
Monetary Policy
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1
Publication Type
Working Paper
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- LIF-SAFE Working Papers [334]