Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to present a behavioral explanation of excess stock price volatility relative to present value theory. Design/methodology/approach – The conceptual basis is the impact of effect on investor decisions. The empirical tests involve survey data collected from a sample of semi-professional Investors and investment advisors. Findings – It is suggested that affect causes investors to perceive an inverse ex ante relationship Between risk perceptions and expected returns. Thus, new good or bad information has an amplified effect on stock valuations. In addition, investors tend to extrapolate recent short-term market movements into the future. Practical implications – The primary implications are that ex ante perceptions of risk and return Vary inversely and that affect has a strong influence on valuation. This means that simple statistical Measures of risk are unlikely to fully capture risk perceptions and that market volatility can be Expected to be greater than a simple present value model would imply. Originality/value – This paper is unique as to the conclusion that risk and return perceptions vary Inversely ex ante and that affect can amplify stock price volatility
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