Abstract

Different forecasting behaviors affect investors’ trading decisions and lead to qualitatively different asset price trajectories. It has been shown in the literature that the weights that investors place on observed asset price changes when forecasting future price changes, and the nature of their confidence when price changes are forecast, determine whether price bubbles, price crashes, and unpredictable price cycles occur. In this paper, we report the results of behavioral experiments involving multiple investors who participated in a market for a virtual asset. Our goal is to study investors’ forecast formation. We conducted three experimental sessions with different participants in each session. We fit different models of forecast formation to the observed data. There is strong evidence that the investors forecast future prices by extrapolating past price changes, even when they know the fundamental value of the asset exactly and the extrapolated forecasts differ significantly from the fundamental value. The rational expectations hypothesis seems inconsistent with the observed forecasts. The forecasting models of all participants that best fit the observed forecasting data were of the type that cause price bubbles and cycles in dynamical systems models, and price bubbles and cycles ended up occurring in all three sessions.

Highlights

  • Data and forecasting form the foundations of both long-term planning and operational control

  • In this paper we focus on human forecasting behavior in a setting in which forecasters know the rational expectations value of the variable to be forecasted, and they observe data of the variable to be forecasted, where the individual data values are allowed to deviate from the rational expectations value

  • We conducted experiments in which the participants were asked to forecast future prices, in which the actual prices were endogenous to the experiment through the trading decisions of the participants, and in which the rational expectations value of future prices was clear and known to all the participants

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Summary

Introduction

Data and forecasting form the foundations of both long-term planning and operational control. For surveys of the impact of human decision makers on forecasts, see for example Armstrong (1985) and Ramnath et al (2008). We conducted experiments in which the participants were asked to forecast future prices, in which the actual prices were endogenous to the experiment through the trading decisions of the participants, and in which the rational expectations value of future prices (fundamental value of the traded asset) was clear and known to all the participants. One question is whether such participants place more emphasis on the rational expectations value or on the observed data to make their forecasts

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