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Book
Valuing Government Obligations When Markets are Incomplete
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Year: 2017 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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Generational Risk - Is It a Big Deal?
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Year: 2013 Publisher: National Bureau of Economic Research

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Valuing Government Obligations When Markets are Incomplete
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Year: 2017 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Determining how to value net government obligations is a long-standing and fundamental question in public finance. Its answer is critical to cost-benefit analysis, the assessment of fiscal sustainability, generational accounting, and other economic issues. This paper posits and simulates a ten-period overlapping generations model with aggregate shocks to price safe and risky government net obligations, including options. Agents can't trade with future generations to hedge the model's productivity and depreciation shocks. Nor can they invest in anything other than one-period bonds and risky capital. Our results are surprising. We find that the pricing of short- as well as long-dated riskless obligations is anchored to the prevailing one-period risk-free return. More surprising, the prices of obligations whose values are proportional to the prevailing wage (e.g., Social Security benefits under a pay-go system with a fixed tax rate) are essentially identical to those of safe obligations, i.e., there is little risk adjustment. This is true notwithstanding our assumption of very large macro shocks. In contrast, government obligations provided in the form of options entail significant risk adjustment. We also show that the value of obligations to unborn generations depends on the nature of the compensating variation. Another finding is that the one-period bond market matters, but less than expected, to valuing obligations. Finally, our model lets us test the ability of arbitrage pricing to get prices right. Surprisingly, with the right specification, it comes close. Although highly stylized, our model suggests the potential of detailed, largescale CGE OLG models to price government obligations as well as non-marketed private securities in the presence of incomplete markets and macro shocks.


Book
The heretics of finance.
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ISBN: 9780470883358 Year: 2009 Publisher: New York Bloomberg Press

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The heretics of finance : conversations with leading practitioners of technical analysis
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ISBN: 047088536X 1282686291 9786612686290 0470883359 9780470885369 9781282686298 9780470883358 Year: 2009 Publisher: New York : Bloomberg Press,

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"An exploration of the evolution and practice of technical analysis with thirteen of the industry's top practitioners"--Provided by publisher.


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The evolution of technical analysis : financial prediction from Babylonian tablets to Bloomberg terminals
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ISBN: 0470952733 1282782819 9786612782817 0470879033 Year: 2010 Publisher: Hoboken, NJ : John Wiley & Sons,

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A comprehensive history of the evolution of technical analysis from ancient times to the Internet age Whether driven by mass psychology, fear or greed of investors, the forces of supply and demand, or a combination, technical analysis has flourished for thousands of years on the outskirts of the financial establishment. In The Evolution of Technical Analysis: Financial Prediction from Babylonian Tablets to Bloomberg Terminals, MIT's Andrew W. Lo details how the charting of past stock prices for the purpose of identifying trends, patterns, strength, and cycles within market data


Book
The heretics of finance : conversations with leading practitioners of technical analysis
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9781576603161 1576603164 Year: 2009 Publisher: New York : Bloomberg Press,

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"An exploration of the evolution and practice of technical analysis with thirteen of the industry's top practitioners"--Provided by publisher.


Book
The evolution of technical analysis : financial prediction from Babylonian tablets to Bloomberg terminals
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9781576603499 Year: 2010 Publisher: Hoboken, N.J. : John Wiley & Sons,

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Book
Valuing Government Obligations When Markets are Incomplete
Authors: --- ---
Year: 2017 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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Abstract

Determining how to value net government obligations is a long-standing and fundamental question in public finance. Its answer is critical to cost-benefit analysis, the assessment of fiscal sustainability, generational accounting, and other economic issues. This paper posits and simulates a ten-period overlapping generations model with aggregate shocks to price safe and risky government net obligations, including options. Agents can't trade with future generations to hedge the model's productivity and depreciation shocks. Nor can they invest in anything other than one-period bonds and risky capital. Our results are surprising. We find that the pricing of short- as well as long-dated riskless obligations is anchored to the prevailing one-period risk-free return. More surprising, the prices of obligations whose values are proportional to the prevailing wage (e.g., Social Security benefits under a pay-go system with a fixed tax rate) are essentially identical to those of safe obligations, i.e., there is little risk adjustment. This is true notwithstanding our assumption of very large macro shocks. In contrast, government obligations provided in the form of options entail significant risk adjustment. We also show that the value of obligations to unborn generations depends on the nature of the compensating variation. Another finding is that the one-period bond market matters, but less than expected, to valuing obligations. Finally, our model lets us test the ability of arbitrage pricing to get prices right. Surprisingly, with the right specification, it comes close. Although highly stylized, our model suggests the potential of detailed, largescale CGE OLG models to price government obligations as well as non-marketed private securities in the presence of incomplete markets and macro shocks.

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Book
Generational Risk - Is It a Big Deal? : Simulating an 80-Period OLG Model with Aggregate Shocks
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Year: 2013 Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. National Bureau of Economic Research

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The theoretical literature presumes generational risk is large enough to merit study and that such risk can be meaningfully shared via appropriate government policies. This paper assesses these propositions. It develops an 80-period OLG model to directly measure generational risk and the extent to which it can be mitigated via financial markets or Social Security. The model is trend stationary as is common in the literature. It features isoelastic preferences, moderate risk aversion, Cobb-Douglas technology, and shocks to both TFP and capital depreciation. Our computation method builds on Marcet (1988), Marcet and Marshall (1994), and Judd, Maliar, and Maliar (2009, 2011), who overcome the curse of dimensionality by limiting a model's state space to its ergodic set. Our baseline calibration uses the literature's estimate of the TFP shock process and sets depreciation shocks to match the variability of the return to U.S. wealth. The baseline results feature higher than observed output variability. Nonetheless, we find relatively little generational risk. This calibration produces a very small risk premium. Resolving this puzzle by adding increasing borrowing costs does not affect our conclusions regarding the size of generational risk. Our second calibration increases depreciation shocks, as in Krueger and Kubler (2006), to match the model's return variability with that of the equity market. Doing so reproduces the equity premium (even absent borrowing costs), but substantially overstates the variability of output and wages. This calibration generates significant cross-generational risk. Under both calibrations, the one-period bond market is very effective in sharing risks among contemporaneous generations. But the simulated sizes of short and long bond positions associated with unrestricted use of this market appear unrealistically large. Finally, we find that Social Security can be effective in reducing generational risk no matter its initial size.

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