Abstract

AbstractHow do people form expectations about the future? We use amateur and expert investors' expectations about financial asset prices to study this question. Three experiments contrast the rational expectations assumption from neoclassical economics (investors forecast according to neoclassical financial theory) against two psychological theories of expectation formation—behaviorally informed expectations (investors understand empirical market anomalies and expect these anomalies to occur) and narrative expectations (investors use narrative thinking to predict future prices). Whereas neoclassical financial theory maintains that past public information cannot be used to predict future prices, participants used company performance information revealed before a base price quotation to project future price trends after that quotation (Experiment 1), contradicting rational expectations. Importantly, these projections were stronger when information concerned predictions about a company's future performance rather than actual data about its past performance, suggesting that people not only rely on financially irrelevant (but narratively relevant) information for making predictions but erroneously impose temporal order on that information. These biased predictions had downstream consequences for asset allocation choices (Experiment 2), and these choices were driven in part by affective reactions to the company performance news (Experiment 3). There were some mild effects of expertise, but overall the effects of narrative appear to be consistent across all levels of expertise studied, including professional financial analysts. We conclude by discussing the prospects for a narrative theory of choice that provide new microfoundational insights about economic behavior.

Highlights

  • We argue here that people circumvent these limited intuitions by using narrative thinking to understand financial assets, influencing forecasts of asset values and subsequent choices

  • We distinguish these theories of investor expectations across three studies

  • Experiment 2 tests whether these predictions translate into asset allocation choices that are biased by the standards of financial theory, with potentially negative implications for the real-world returns of amateur investors

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Summary

Introduction

In many domains of life, we aim to buy low and to sell high. This insight is a cornerstone of economics and helps to provide a bridge between our beliefs and our behavior (e.g., Friedman, 1957; Lachmann, 1943). The best-known conception of expectations in economics is the rational expectations assumption (Lucas, 1972; Muth, 1961). This assumption states that the agents in an economic model are “rational,” in the sense that they share the same assumptions as the

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